For Immediate Release, September 12, 2016 Contact: Jamie Pang, (858) 699-4153, jpang@biologicaldiversity.org
Feds to Confine Red Wolves in North Carolina to Federal Lands, Find New Reintroduction Sites
“It’s good the Service is acknowledging that we need more breeding pairs and new reintroduction sites to spur red wolf recovery,” said Jamie Pang, endangered species campaigner at the Center for Biological Diversity. “But we’re extremely disappointed in the agency’s highly political decision to confine red wolves to only federal public lands. The best opportunity for red wolf survival is to allow these animals to expand onto the private lands surrounding the refuges.” The best available science demonstrates that red wolves are still recoverable. A 2014 report written by the Wildlife Management Institute at the behest of the Service concluded that if the red wolf is going to recover, two additional populations need to be established in the wild, and additional resources need to be invested to build local support for red wolf recovery. A recent population viability analysis, released in June, also concluded that red wolf survival is possible if more captive populations are released into the wild and mortality is reduced. The Center for Biological Diversity submitted an emergency petition to revise the 10(j) rule requesting the Service reduce shooting deaths on private lands and identify additional reintroduction sites. Nearly 500,000 red wolf supporters signed a petition delivered last month to the Fish and Wildlife Service calling on the agency to continue to work to recover the dwindling red wolf population, with only a reported 45 red wolves left in the wild.
The Center for Biological Diversity is
a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.1
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Tuesday, September 13, 2016
Feds to Confine Red Wolves in North Carolina to Federal Lands, Find New Reintroduction Sites
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