Contact:
Jennifer Witherspoon, 415-293-6067, jwitherspoon@edf.org
Chandler Clay, 202-572-3312, cclay@edf.org
(WASHINGTON—November 30, 2012) The
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service announced its initial listing decision today for
the lesser prairie chicken as “threatened” under the
Endangered Species Act (ESA).
This decision could trigger new
scrutiny by state and federal wildlife agencies on permits and operations for
energy developers and ranchers that could impact the bird’s habitat in Kansas,
Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico and Colorado – states that are prime grounds for
oil, gas and wind development, as well as farming and ranching.
“In the past, these kinds of ESA listing
decisions have led to years of litigation and conflict,” said David Festa,
Vice President of the Land, Water and Wildlife program for Environmental
Defense Fund (EDF). “Now, with the lesser prairie chicken, we’re working with
land users to set up Wildlife Habitat Exchanges that provide cooperative,
cost-effective habitat conservation.”
EDF is working with landowners,
developers and energy companies to design a new, cooperative approach to
conservation that promises ample habitat protection at low cost – potentially
enough habitat to reverse dwindling populations and avert a final listing under
the law. This approach, known as Wildlife Habitat Exchanges, enlists private
landowners like ranchers and farmers to create and maintain vital habitat,
which energy companies and other developers can in turn use to meet their
obligations to protect wildlife.
“There’s an energy boom in the
West and Wildlife Habitat Exchanges allow for thoughtful, well-planned
mitigation strategies that will result in measurable conservation benefits for
wildlife species like the lesser prairie chicken,” said Eric Holst,
senior director of EDF’s Working Lands
program.
This cooperative approach is
essential to achieving long-term results, as 90 percent of the bird’s habitat
exists on private lands. Many states, farmers and ranchers are already throwing
their weight behind the model: Texas used it to protect the golden cheeked
warbler, and the Texas and Kansas Farm Bureaus want to see it used for the lesser
prairie chicken.
“Habitat Exchanges are a smart solution for threatened species
such as the lesser prairie chicken,” said Steve Swaffar of the Kansas Farm
Bureau. “Exchanges deliver quantifiable measures of habitat and resources, at
the same time giving private landowners an opportunity to derive income by
providing for the specific needs of the species, and continue to use their
property for agriculture production.”
The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Agency has up to a year to make a
final listing decision.
“EDF supports Wildlife Habitat Exchanges as a proven model that could
change the trajectory of the lesser prairie chicken,” said
Festa. “It can bring the species back from the brink and put it on a path
toward recovery before the final listing decision is made.”
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