Dear Conservation Scientist,

 

In 2007, the Bush administration's top lawyer (solicitor) at the Department
of Interior issued a memorandum substantially redefining a key provision of
the Endangered Species Act (ESA).  The ESA requires listing of a species as
threatened or endangered not only when it is at risk of worldwide
extinction, but also when it is at risk in any "significant portion of its
range" (SPOIR).  This important provision both allows for listing of species
before they are on the brink of extinction, and ensures that recovery of
species goes beyond zoo like populations that are deemed secure in small
portions of species' ranges.

 

The Solicitor's memorandum, however, sharply limits the application of SPOIR
by limiting analysis of whether species are endangered in significant
portions of range to solely their current range.  This amounts to a shifting
baseline, whereby species that have lost substantial range are considered
not at risk because they occupy most or all of their current range and are
therefore denied the protections of the ESA.

 

The Solicitor's memorandum also limits application of the ESA by specifying
that once a species has been found to be endangered in a significant portion
of range, protection will be applied in only that portion of range.  This
gives the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service the authority to draw lines around
the most endangered portions of species' current ranges and only provide
protection in these areas, effectively limiting recovery and providing
little incentive for recovering species to their historic ranges.  Indeed,
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has already used the memorandum to deny
or limit species protection.  

 

Please visit: 

 

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/campaigns/cleaning_up_the_bush_legacy/opp
ose_policy_limiting_esa.html 

 

to see the Solicitor's memorandum and three peer-reviewed papers discussing
the potential and real impacts of the solicitor's memorandum on species
conservation and to sign a letter to Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar
asking for the policy to be rescinded. Also, please forward this email
widely to your colleagues.         

 

Sincerely,

 

Noah

 

 

Noah Greenwald, M.S.

Endangered Species Program Director

Center for Biological Diversity

PO Box 11374

Portland, OR     97211

503-484-7495 

 

"Those who are most aware of the declining health of natural systems must be
the ones to sound the alarm.  They must be willing to take a stand.  Some
biologists are reluctant to vigorously defend sound practices in the
treatment of the earth because they feel that their jobs, funding, and
perhaps even their lives may be threatened, as indeed they may.  Even so, if
those who understand freshwater [or other] systems best, and are most aware
of their inestimable value to mankind are not to to be advocates, then there
will be little effective advocacy."

 

G.W. Folkerts in Aquatic Fauna in Peril: the Southeastern Perspective

 

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