Arizona and New Mexico offer less than one percent of total rangewide habitat for jaguars
The Arizona Game and Fish Department recently submitted comments to the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on their proposal to designate critical
habitat for jaguars in Arizona and New Mexico. The department is
committed to the conservation of all of Arizona’s diverse wildlife
species. Critical habitat under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) is a
legal designation that must meet defined criteria within ESA and those
criteria have not been met for jaguars.
Game and Fish has asked that the proposal be withdrawn because
conservation of the species is entirely reliant on activities in the
jaguar's primary habitat of Central and South America to be successful.
Lands in Arizona and New Mexico make up less than one percent of the
species' historic range and are not essential to the conservation of the
species.
The Fish and Wildlife Service proposal considers jaguar occurrence from
1962 to 2011. All of the available information from that time frame
and even decades before consistently indicates that Arizona does not
provide habitat that is critical to jaguar conservation. Male jaguars
from Mexico infrequently use southern Arizona as they roam. Females have
not been confirmed in Arizona since 1962, and no breeding populations
of jaguars exist now or ever have been documented in the U.S., even in
historical times.
“The sanctity of the ESA is put at risk when litigious groups misuse
legal terms to gain more control of wildlife conservation and public
lands. Their maneuvers undermine the true intent of the act and
jeopardize the public’s support for wildlife conservation,” said
Director Larry Voyles of Game and Fish.
Arizona and New Mexico represent the northern most extent of the range
for a population segment of jaguars centered approximately 140 miles
south of the international border.
It was thought the species had completely disappeared from the state
for many decades until 1996 when the first jaguar documented since 1986
was photographed by an Arizona houndsman. In the last half century, at
most 12 different jaguars have been documented in Arizona or New Mexico.
The Fish and Wildlife Service proposal identifies six areas as proposed
jaguar critical habitat in Arizona and New Mexico where jaguars already
receive the full protection of the federal Endangered Species Act. The
vast majority of the proposed critical habitat area is public land that
is already under federal management jurisdiction or federally-approved
conservation plans.
Game and Fish believes that the unwarranted designation of critical
habitat for jaguars would likely result in denial of access to lands for
jaguar conservation and research efforts; fewer observations of jaguars
being reported; less timely sighting reports from people that do choose
to report a jaguar; and, an increased likelihood of illegal activities
which undermine endangered species conservation. Press Release
The Dept's complete comments are here.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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