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Trump administration slashes imperiled spotted owls' habitat

  
Via:  Bob Nelson  •  4 years ago  •  9 comments

By:   GILLIAN FLACCUS (AP NEWS)

Trump administration slashes imperiled spotted owls' habitat



"This revision guts protected habitat for the northern spotted owl..."

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original

The outgoing Administration seems to be doing as much damage as it possibly can before it goes.



S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



original A Northern Spotted Owl flies after an elusive mouse jumping off the end of a stick in the
Deschutes National Forest near Camp Sherman, Ore.

AP Photo/Don Ryan, File

The Trump administration said Wednesday that it would slash millions of acres of protected habitat designated for the imperiled northern spotted owl in Oregon, Washington state and Northern California, much of it in prime timber locations in Oregon's coastal ranges.

Environmentalists immediately decried the move and accused the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service under President Donald Trump of taking a parting shot at protections designed to help restore the species in favor of the timber industry. The tiny owl is listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act and was rejected for an upgrade to endangered status last year by the federal agency despite losing nearly 4% of its population annually.

"This revision guts protected habitat for the northern spotted owl by more than a third. It's Trump's latest parting gift to the timber industry and another blow to a species that needs all the protections it can get to fully recover," said Noah Greenwald, endangered species director for the Center for Biological Diversity.

Timber groups applauded the decision, which won't take effect for 60 days. More thinning and management of protected forests is necessary to prevent wildfires, which devastated 560 square miles (1,450 square kilometers) of spotted owl habitat last fall, said Travis Joseph, president of the American Forest Resources Council. Of that, about 300 square miles (777 square kilometers) is no longer considered viable for the birds.

Loss of the ability to log in areas protected for the spotted owl has devastated rural communities, he said. The 3.4 million acres (1.4 million hectares) removed from federal protections Wednesday includes all of Oregon's so-called O&C lands, which are big timber territory. The more than 2 million acres (809,000 hectares) are spread in a checkerboard pattern over 18 counties in western Oregon.

"This rule rights a wrong imposed on rural communities and businesses and gives us a chance to restore balance to federal forest management and species conservation in the Pacific Northwest," Joseph said.

The Fish and Wildlife Service agreed in a settlement with the timber industry to reevaluate the spotted owls' protected territory following a 2018 U.S. Supreme Court decision involving a different federally protected species.

The Trump administration has moved to roll back protections for waterways and wetlands, narrow protections for wildlife facing extinction and open more public land to oil and gas drilling.

But for decades, the federal government has been trying to save the northern spotted owl, a native bird that sparked an intense battle over logging across Washington, Oregon and California.

The dark-eyed owl prefers to nest in old-growth forests and received federal protections in 1990, a listing that dramatically redrew the economic landscape for the Pacific Northwest timber industry and launched a decadeslong battle between environmentalists and loggers. Old-growth Douglas firs, many 100 to 200 years old, that are preferred by the owl are also of great value to loggers.

After the owl was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, earning it a Time magazine cover, U.S. officials halted logging on millions of acres of old-growth forests on federal lands to protect the bird's habitat. But the population kept declining, and it faces another threat: competition from the barred owl.

The Fish and Wildlife Service has since said the northern spotted owl warrants being moved up to the more robust "endangered" status because of continued population declines. But the agency refused to do so last year, saying other species took higher priority.

That decision is facing a legal challenge led by the Center for Biological Diversity.


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Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
1  seeder  Bob Nelson    4 years ago

But hey! There are millionaires who need that timber!

 
 
 
Paula Bartholomew
Professor Quiet
2  Paula Bartholomew    4 years ago

His sons dumb and dumber must need a new endangered species to shoot.  I'm sure Biden will correct this with his own EO.

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
2.1  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  Paula Bartholomew @2    4 years ago

The problem is that if contracts have been signed...

 
 
 
bbl-1
Professor Quiet
2.1.1  bbl-1  replied to  Bob Nelson @2.1    4 years ago

No problem.  Businessman Trump always broke contracts he signed so this is just more of the =same ole'-same ole'.

 
 
 
MalamuteMan
Professor Quiet
3  MalamuteMan    4 years ago

Tragic!!!

Trump and his administration are pretty much the worst that humanity has to offer.

I hope Biden can undo that travesty right away.

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
4  JBB    4 years ago

Of course he did...

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
5  Kavika     4 years ago

This POS administration all deserved to be impeached and jailed. The destruction of the environment has been a top priority for them.

 
 
 
bbl-1
Professor Quiet
6  bbl-1    4 years ago

Trump enjoys hurting things.  He always has.  Ask Michael Cohen, he helped him. 

 
 
 
MalamuteMan
Professor Quiet
7  MalamuteMan    4 years ago

There is a glimmer of hope... I just saw this...

 
 

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