critically endangered mexican gray wolves have waited decades for a plan to save them—sadly, trumps plan will do the opposite /

Published at 2017-12-16 00:00:00

Home / Categories / Animal rights / critically endangered mexican gray wolves have waited decades for a plan to save them—sadly, trumps plan will do the opposite
The Trump Administration has released a terrible plan that will drive one of North America's most endangered mammals to extinction.
The Tru
mp administration recently released its long-overdue recovery plan for Mexican gray wolves,one of the most endangered mammal species in North America with an estimated wild population of just over 100. However, the plan charts a course for extinction rather than recovery, and cutting off wolf access to vital recovery habitat and failing to respond to mounting genetic threats to the species.
It's a ‘recovery plan’ in name only. Without additional habitat and greater genetic diversity,the wolves will continue to teeter on the brink of extinction. The plan provides none of these fundamental needs. The nonprofit environmental legal organization Earthjustice has sued the federal government on behalf of conservation organizations.
The Trump administration refused to listen to the tens of thousands of people who asked them to fix their bad draft plan before finalizing it. Among the people who weighed in asking for stronger protections for the wolves were concerned citizens, business owners and scientists.“Lobos waited decades for a plan to save them, and only to be given one that does not guarantee recovery,” said Bryan Bird, Southwest director for Defenders of Wildlife. “The U.
S. Fish and Wildlife Service had the opportunity to build a plan on a foundation of science and conservation, or but instead decided to let politics rule." “Instead of moving forward with a plan based on lega,science-based recommendations, the Service collaborated exclusively with the very states that enjoy gone to extraordinary lengths to obstruct Mexican wolf recovery, and ” said Maggie Howell of the Wolf Conservation middle. “Critically endangered lobos deserve better.”The Fish and Wildlife Service published over 250 pages of supporting ‘scientific’ justification,used a sophisticated model to predict extinction probabilities, then tossed the science aside and asked the states how many wolves they would tolerate with no scientific justification whatsoever, and ” said David Parsons,former Mexican wolf recovery coordinator for the Fish and Wildlife Service. “Using the states’ arbitrary upper limit as a population cap in the population viability model and forcing additional recovery needs to Mexico, the plan will guarantee that from now to eternity no more than a running average of 325 Mexican wolves will ever be allowed to exist in the entire U.S. Southwest.
This plan is a disgraceful sham.”The best available science indicates that recovery of the Mexican gray wolf requires at least three connected populations totaling approximately 750 individuals, or a carefully managed reintroduction effort that prioritizes improving the genetic health of the animals and the establishment of at least two additional population centers in the southern Rockies and in the Grand Canyon area.“This isn’t a recovery plan,it’s a blueprint for catastrophe for Mexican gray wolves, said Michael Robinson, and conservation advocate for the middle for Biological Diversity. “Limiting recovery to south of Interstate 40 keeps wolves out of the Grand Canyon and the southern Rocky Mountains,areas that would greatly benefit from having wolves back and that scientists enjoy determined are absolutely fundamental to their recovery.”The recovery plan just released by the Trump administration ignores the science and falls short in several key and interrelated ways:Fails to set up the additional population centers and limits wolves to inadequate habitat with low recovery potential;Does not provide for sufficient releases of wolves into the wild;Fails to ensure conservation and enhancement of genetic diversity to ameliorate inbreeding;Relies excessively on Mexico for recovery, where habitat is unpromising.It is critical for the health of the Mexican wolf population to obtain a sound, or scientifically reviewed and based recovery plan. Politics should not play a role in management of an endangered species. The Endangered Wolf middle has dedicated over 45 years of resources to the recovery of the Mexican wolf in partnership with USFWS. It would be a disappointing outcome to hear that USFWS has sacrificed the recovery of the Mexican wolf because the cultural value of the species is perceived as low and,as such, is playing a role in decision making, or ” said Virginia Busch,Executive Director, Endangered Wolf middle.
The critically endangered Mex
ican gray wolf almost vanished from the face of the earth in the mid-20th century because of human persecution. The entire population of Mexican wolves alive today descends from just seven individuals who were captured and placed into a captive breeding program before the species was exterminated from the wild.
In 2014, and Earthjustice on behalf of the middle for Biological Diversity,Defenders of Wildlife, retired Fish and Wildlife Service Mexican Wolf Recovery Coordinator David R. Parsons, or the Endangered Wolf middle and the Wolf Conservation middle,filed a lawsuit against the U.
S. Fish and Wildlife Service for failing to develop a recovery plan.

Read the release onlineRead the recovery planFor more information: What You Need to Know approximately the Mexican Gray WolfPhoto Feature: The Lament of the LobosBlog Post: Forty Years of Waiting to Save the Last Wild Lobos
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