Audubon: The Golden-cheeked Warbler Avoids Sure Path to Extinction, Remains Protected
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I thank all the DUers that signed the E petition-paper work on this.
Efforts to Undermine the Endangered Species Act Fail as US Fish and Wildlife Service Rejects Junk Science
Golden-cheeked Warbler. Photo: Christian Moynihan/Audubon Photography Awards
http://www.audubon.org/news/the-golden-cheeked-warbler-avoids-sure-path-extinction-remains-protected?utm_source=action&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2016-06-09-advisory#skip_interests
AUSTIN, Tex.Today, the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) published its decision to keep the Golden-cheeked Warbler on the endangered species list, ignoring petitions from Texas officials to delist the bird. The decision to ignore the petitions was based on the lack of substantial scientific or commercial information to justify a review of this species status under the Endangered Species Act (ESA).
Sound science has won the day and the sanctity of the Endangered Species Act remains intact for now, said Iliana Peña, director of conservation for Audubon Texas, the state office of the National Audubon Society. While todays announcement is good news for the Golden-cheeked Warbler, we are not out of the woods by any measure. A one-two punch of disappearing habitat and climate change still threatens this Texas native, so we must stay focused and keep fighting the good fight.
This delicate, neo-tropical songbird breeds exclusively in Texas Hill Country, making it a true Lone Star native. The alarming rate at which the birds breeding grounds were disappearing due to development led to the original 1990 decision to list the species as endangered. Even with federal protection in place, one-third of its Texas habitat, nearly 1.5 million acres, has disappeared. Removal of ESA protection would eventually lead to its extinction. In August 2014, USFWS released the results of a routine five-year review of the warblers status, which concluded that the bird should remain listed due to ongoing widespread destruction of its habitat. Delisting efforts were made in spite of such a conclusion.
Local conservation groups like Travis Audubon Society in Austin and Bexar Audubon Society in San Antonio submitted comments to USFWS in support of the agencys decision to keep the Golden-cheeked Warbler listed as endangered. Both groups, along with Audubon Texas and the rest of the states twenty Audubon chapters, advocate for birds and other wildlife across Texas using science, policy and education.
FULL story at link.