Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Fire emphasized in sage grouse habitat strategy

A new wildfire strategy designed to protect sagebrush terrain vital to a chicken-sized bird now under consideration for endangered species protection was announced by Interior Secretary Sally Jewell Tuesday, with Nevada officials praising proposals that they've been pushing for years. The plan is detailed in the first of two reports called for in a secretarial order issued by Jewell in January and outlines actions and activities designed to reduce the size and severity of rangeland fires as the summer 2015 fire season quickly approaches. In Nevada, wildfire and the related invasion of cheatgrass and other non-native vegetation is described as the foremost danger facing populations of the greater sage grouse, a candidate for listing under the Endangered Species Act. The plan calls for a firefighting strategy making protection of prime sage grouse habitat a top priority. To do so it will, among other things, rely to a greater degree on the expertise of veteran fire crews, rural fire departments and fire protection associations made up of ranchers who can respond to a fire quickly. It also calls for accelerating restoration of burned sagebrush terrain by developing a "reliable supply of genetically appropriate and locally adapted seed" and use of seeding technology and equipment "for successful and expanded effective restoration of the sagebrush-steppe ecosystem."...more

It appears the Secretary is taking the appropriate steps to keep the bird off the list, and to withstand a court challenge.

1 comment:

drjohn said...

What they need to be doing is to continually graze the cheat grass lands continually with sheep to help control the fire danger. Around Winnemuca the majority of growth is cheat grass and if you remember they kicked some of the cows off this area last year