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Emergency protection sought for 32 species: Activists appeal to Interior, argue habitat is shrinking fast
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
(MSNBC.com)ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Environmentalists are
seeking emergency protection for nearly three
dozens rare plants, animals and insects under
the Endangered Species Act, saying all are at
risk due to habitat destruction and other
threats.
WildEarth Guardians is asking Interior
Secretary Dirk Kempthorne and U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service director Dale Hall to list 32
species from across the West — ranging from
flowering plants to snails — to ensure they do
not disappear.
In an emergency petition sent to officials on
Thursday, the group contends the habitat for
some of the species has been reduced to just
one location.
"The species we have chosen are all at the
knife's edge of extinction," the petition
states. "Given the location of these species on
either no or only one known site on earth, a
single event — whether from drought, flood,
habitat destruction, pollution, exotic species,
or other factors — could literally erase them
from the world."
Valerie Fellows, a spokeswoman for the Fish and
Wildlife Service in Washington, D.C., said
Monday she was not sure whether the agency's
endangered species division had received the
petition. She said the agency typically has 90
days to review petitions.
WildEarth Guardians said the species in the
petition were selected from a list of 674 the
group had sought standard endangered species
listing for in a pair of petitions filed last
summer. The group followed up with a lawsuit in
March, charging that Fish and Wildlife failed
to act on the initial petitions.
The emergency petition is an attempt to turn up
the pressure on the agency, said John Horning,
executive director of WildEarth Guardians.
Horning says the endangered species listing
program has nearly ground to a halt. He pointed
out that the polar bear was the first U.S.
species to be listed in over two years and that
all of the listings under the Bush
administration have been prompted by either
citizen petitions or legal action.
As a result of the lack of action over the past
eight years, there's more of a need to invoke
the emergency provisions of the Endangered
Species Act, Horning said.
He said WildEarth Guardians is looking to the
species listed in the emergency petition to
help make that case.
"These species deserve immediate, emergency
protection under the Endangered Species Act.
The Fish and Wildlife Service has the authority
to save them from vanishing forever, and we're
urging them to use that authority," Horning
said.