January, 13 2021, 11:00pm EDT

For Immediate Release
Contact:
Kelly Nokes, Western Environmental Law Center, 575-613-8051, nokes@westernlaw.org
John Mellgren, Western Environmental Law Center, 541-359-0990, mellgren@westernlaw.org[BS1]
Erik Molvar, Western Watersheds Project, 307-399-7910, emolvar@westernwatersheds.org
Nick Cady, Cascadia Wildlands, 314-482-3746, nick@cascwild.org
Lindsay Larris, WildEarth Guardians, 310-923-1465, llarris@wildearthguardians.org
Western Wolf Coalition Challenges Nationwide Wolf Delisting
Today, a coalition of Western wolf advocates challenged the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's decision to prematurely strip wolves of federal protections in the contiguous 48 states, in violation of the Endangered Species Act.
WASHINGTON
Today, a coalition of Western wolf advocates challenged the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's decision to prematurely strip wolves of federal protections in the contiguous 48 states, in violation of the Endangered Species Act.
The most recent data from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and its state partners show an estimated 4,400 wolves inhabit the western Great Lakes states, but only 108 wolves in Washington state (with only 20 outside of eastern Washington), 158 in Oregon (with only 16 outside of northeastern Oregon), and a scant 15 exist in California. Nevada, Utah, and Colorado have had a few wolf sightings over the past three years, but wolves remain functionally absent from their historical habitat in these states.
"Wolves are a keystone species whose presence on landscapes regulates animal populations and improves ecosystem health - something the Service has acknowledged for at least 44 years," said Kelly Nokes, Western Environmental Law Center attorney. "Allowing people to kill wolves in Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana has already stunted recovery in those states. Applying this same death sentence to wolves throughout the contiguous U.S. would nationalize these negative effects, with potentially catastrophic ripple effects on ecosystems where wolves have yet to fully recover."
In delisting wolves, the Service ignored the science showing they are not recovered in the West. The Service concluded that because in its belief there are sufficient wolves in the Great Lakes states, it does not matter that wolves in the West are not yet recovered. The Endangered Species Act demands more, including restoring the species in the ample suitable habitats afforded by the wild public lands throughout the West. Indeed, wolves are listed as endangered under state laws in Washington and California, and wolves only occupy a small portion of available, suitable habitat in Oregon. Likewise, wolves have only just begun to recolonize their historical, wild, public lands habitat in much of the West, including in Colorado and the southern Rockies.
"From a scientific standpoint, wolves are nowhere near being recovered in the western United States," said Erik Molvar, a wildlife biologist and executive director with Western Watersheds Project. "The federal government has the obligation to keep wolves protected until robust and secure populations are in place throughout the West, and we intend to ensure that wolves get the legal defense they need against premature delisting."
"We have seen what happens when 'management' of wolves is returned to hostile state wildlife agencies disinterested in maintaining robust, stable, and genetically diverse wolf populations," said Lindsay Larris, Wildlife Program director at WildEarth Guardians. "Idaho, which allows an individual to kill up to 30 wolves annually, saw the slaughter of nearly 600 wolves and wolf pups in a recent 12-month period and now other states are gearing up to allow wolf hunting and trapping this fall. Returning this type of unscientific and barbaric 'management' to states at this early juncture would spell disaster for true gray wolf recovery, plain and simple."
The conservation groups have long been active on wolf recovery issues in the American West, including working with Western states to develop science-based wolf management plans, mounting cases to rein in rogue federal government wolf-killing programs, promoting recovery efforts in the Southwest for critically imperiled Mexican gray wolves, and working with local governments and landowners to deploy non-lethal tools that prevent wolf-livestock conflicts.
"With only a handful of wolves in California, western Oregon, and western Washington, wolf recovery is still precarious on the west coast," said John Mellgren, Western Environmental Law Center general counsel. "A rush to delist the species across the entire country runs counter to the Service's own peer review, and tells West Coast states that wolf recovery in their part of the country does not matter. We look forward to presenting the science to a federal court."
While the Trump administration may believe it can disregard science to promote purely political listing decisions, the law does not support such a stance. The best available science says gray wolves are not recovered, and the coalition looks forward to having a court hear their science-based arguments for why wolves still need of Endangered Species Act protections to truly recover across the species range.
"In just the last year, we lost an icon to wolf recovery when OR-7 passed away. He and his mate represent the first generation of wolves in western Oregon in nearly a century," said Joseph Vaile with the conservation group Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands Center based in southwest Oregon. "Delisting is clearly premature and obviously politically driven. It's a last-ditch effort by the Trump administration to strip away protections for recovering wildlife."
"Removing Endangered Species Act protections for any species should be based science, not politics, and the science tells us wolves are not there yet," said Chris Bachman, Wildlife Program director at The Lands Council. "The gray wolf remains functionally extinct in 85% of its historic range, with 70% of suitable habitat remaining unoccupied across the lower 48 states. Legal protections must remain in place for the gray wolf to allow wider dispersal across a significant portion of its range."
"Wolves were nearly exterminated from the lower 48. We should be celebrating the species' ongoing recovery and the incredible success stories of the Endangered Species Act," said Nick Cady with Cascadia Wildlands. "Instead, wolves have become another victim of the polarization and political game-playing in Washington D.C., and conservation groups are left battling to stem rising calls for active eradication of the species. Conservation of native species formerly enjoyed widespread bipartisan support. The actions of this administration toward wildlife are shameful."
"The finger on the trigger of wolf slaughter is driven by anti-government fanatics who foment fear, lies and mistrust. The Endangered Species Act makes such hostility to wild nature more difficult, more closely watched," said Timothy Coleman, director of Kettle Range Conservation Group and former member of the state Wolf Advisory Group. "Eighty-five percent of wolves we know were killed in Washington were in the Kettle River Range where gray wolf was delisted from the Endangered Species Act in 2009, though it remained state listed endangered. Had it remained ESA listed, entire wolf families would not have been repeatedly killed in northeast Washington. Regionally, this has meant wolves are not dispersing to Mount Rainier and Olympia National Park, or other public lands in the Pacific Northwest."
The coalition of western wildlife advocates launching this legal challenge includes WildEarth Guardians, Western Watersheds Project, Cascadia Wildlands, Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center, Environmental Protection Information Center (EPIC), The Lands Council, Wildlands Network, Klamath Forest Alliance, and Kettle Range Conservation Group, represented by the Western Environmental Law Center. A separate lawsuit is planned by Earthjustice representing national wildlife groups.
Western Watersheds Project is an environmental conservation group working to protect and restore watersheds and wildlife through.
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