Posted: Saturday, August 16, 2014
PHOENIX — The
Arizona Game and Fish Commission voted Aug. 1 to take several actions
related to Mexican wolf conservation in light of the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service’s recent release of the draft Environmental Impact
Statement on proposed rule revisions that govern Mexican wolf recovery.
The commission directed the Arizona Game and Fish Department to continue working with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to develop a rule that protects all state trust wildlife species and includes key elements of the Arizona Cooperators’ Mexican Wolf Conservation Alternative. The department also was directed to develop a full range of options for the commission to consider, including congressional involvement, litigation or withdrawal from the Mexican wolf reintroduction effort if a rule cannot be developed that is acceptable to the department.
The commission directed the Arizona Game and Fish Department to continue working with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to develop a rule that protects all state trust wildlife species and includes key elements of the Arizona Cooperators’ Mexican Wolf Conservation Alternative. The department also was directed to develop a full range of options for the commission to consider, including congressional involvement, litigation or withdrawal from the Mexican wolf reintroduction effort if a rule cannot be developed that is acceptable to the department.
The
commission expressed concern at the absence from the draft
Environmental Impact Statement of the Arizona Cooperators’ Alternative
that was developed by 28 cooperating agencies and stakeholders and
submitted to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for consideration. This
scientifically based alternative supported further cooperation between
federal and state agencies and stakeholders to achieve a self-sustaining
wolf population.
“As
the chair of the Arizona Game and Fish Commission, I’m profoundly
disappointed that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service failed to include
the Arizona Cooperators’ Alternative in the draft Environmental Impact
Statement. This alternative does exactly what the Endangered Species Act
requires the agencies to do: It allows the Mexican wolf population in
the Southwest to expand using sound science and contribute to the
recovery of the subspecies, while also recognizing that recovery cannot
be accomplished in Arizona and New Mexico alone,” Robert Mansell said.
“Most importantly though, the alternative provides the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service with a management approach that balances the need for
expanded Mexican wolf reintroduction areas with social tolerance of
those most affected by the program.”
The Cooperators’ Alternative included:
•
Allowing up to triple the target number of Mexican wolves in the
Southwest from the 1982 recovery plan’s goal of not less than 100 wolves
to achieve a self-sustaining population.
•
More than a 900-percent expansion (11 million acres) of the area in
Arizona where wolves can be released and where they can disperse and
establish territories.
• Establishing a connectivity corridor for wolves to disperse to the subspecies’ core historical range in Mexico.
• Recognition of the importance of Mexico as a primary element to successful Mexican wolf recovery.
“The
biology of wolf repatriation has been relatively easy. The greatest
challenge has been to develop social tolerance for the program,” Mansell
said. “Without social tolerance, Mexican wolf recovery will never
achieve full success.”
Until
the more than 30-year-old recovery plan for Mexican wolves is updated
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, this 10(j) rule will provide
interim guidance for managing the program.
The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will accept written comments on the
proposed rule and draft Environmental Impact Statement through Sept. 23,
2014. Those interested in submitting comments should send them to the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service;
see www.fws.gov/southwest/es/mexicanwolf/ for instructions on how to
submit comments.
The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service also will host two public information
sessions and two public hearings on the proposed rule and draft
Environmental Impact Statement. The information sessions will take place
from 2 to 4 p.m., and the hearings will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. on the
following days:
• Wednesday, Aug. 13, at the Civic Center, 400 W. Fourth St., Truth or Consequences, N.M.
The Game and Fish Department will be submitting comments on the draft Environmental Impact Statement.
The
department supports the proposal to delist gray wolves in the United
States and list the Mexican wolf as an endangered subspecies of gray
wolf because it recognizes that the Mexican wolf still faces
conservation challenges and warrants continued protection and
management. The department has multiple concerns with the proposed
revision to the Mexican wolf’s 10(j) nonessential experimental
population rule.
The
Arizona Game and Fish Department and Commission have been supportive
and actively involved in Mexican wolf conservation since before the
first wolves were released in 1998.
Department biologists lead daily field work to guide the reintroduction of Mexican wolves. These biologists also live in the communities most affected by the program, providing them with a unique on-the-ground perspective. The 2013 year-end population count showed a minimum of 83 wolves roaming Arizona and New Mexico, up from 75 wolves in 2012. This is the third consecutive year that the Mexican wolf population has experienced more than a 10-percent population increase.
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Department biologists lead daily field work to guide the reintroduction of Mexican wolves. These biologists also live in the communities most affected by the program, providing them with a unique on-the-ground perspective. The 2013 year-end population count showed a minimum of 83 wolves roaming Arizona and New Mexico, up from 75 wolves in 2012. This is the third consecutive year that the Mexican wolf population has experienced more than a 10-percent population increase.
source
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