Wednesday, June 02, 2010

CBD files suit on endangered species and livestock grazing

The Center for Biological Diversity today sued the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect an endangered species, the Chiricahua leopard frog, from livestock grazing in the Fossil Creek watershed in the Mazatzal Mountains of central Arizona. Approximately 290 cows were released into the Fossil Creek Range Allotment last September, and grazing is ongoing there now. Last year, the Coconino National Forest approved grazing by nearly 500 head of cattle in the 42,000-acre range allotment straddling the Mogollon Rim between Camp Verde and Strawberry. A Forest Service study showed that degraded range conditions due to past grazing and ongoing drought could not support the approved grazing levels, and that adverse effects to the watershed were likely to result from more grazing. The complaint filed today in U.S. District Court in Tucson states that the Forest Service violated its management standards by allowing grazing levels in excess of what agency science shows to be the capacity of the land. The Fish and Wildlife Service also violated the Endangered Species Act by failing to identify how many Chiricahua leopard frogs would be harmed or killed by livestock grazing — and by failing to limit that harm and mortality – as cows trample and dewater streams and wetlands...press release

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I know the Fossil Cr. Allotment pretty well. Not some place one of the perfumed princes of environmentalism would be able to find or find their way out of.

Frank DuBois said...

"perfumed princes of environmentalsim"...good stuff.

Anonymous said...

I wish that was original but I borrowed it from Ralph Peters who describes the "perfumed princes" of the military.