One year after the announcement by the
Department of Interior that a listing under the Endangered Species Act
was not warranted for the greater sage grouse and the implementation of
restrictive resource management plans for the species, the Public Lands Council and National Cattlemen’s Beef Association submitted a report to the agencies citing concerns with the methodology used.
Ethan Lane, PLC executive director and
NCBA executive director of federal lands, notes that recent studies have
shown little or no correlation between sage grouse nest success and the
requirements set out by the agencies.
“The threats to sage grouse habitat
remain wildfire and land development, both of which are mitigated by
proper livestock grazing,” said Lane. “One of the most restrictive and
burdensome requirements set out by the agencies through the sage grouse
Resource Management Plans is the arbitrary stubble height requirement.
To say that grass height alone can predict whether or not a sage grouse
nest will be successful is not accurate and based on flawed
methodology.”
The report points to recent studies
showing that the assessments of stubble height required by the Bureau of
Land Management, U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
are incorrect. These studies show that the timing of grass height
measurements in relation to nest predation are fundamentally flawed and
not indicative of nesting success.
“Grass height measurements for
successful nests are usually conducted in late spring when the eggs have
successfully hatched and the grass is taller,” said Lane. “Contrarily,
predation of nests often happens closer to the time the eggs are laid in
early spring when the grasses are still growing. Grass height alone has
little impact on the success or failure of sage grouse nesting, yet
these requirements put intense pressure on grazing rotation and the long
term health of the range.”
Repeated studies clearly show that
grasses respond best to intensively-managed grazing that focuses heavily
on timing and recovery. A managed grazing rotation means that a pasture
will be grazed early in the season in some years and later in others to
ensure optimal recovery and rangeland health.
“The Resource Management Plans make
stubble height the driving factor in grazing decisions and impede
improving rangeland conditions,” said Lane. “This is counter-productive
to sage grouse habitat, as we know healthy rangelands are the largest
factor in the success of the species. Moreover, by prioritizing
individual data points like grass height over long-term range health,
these plans also detract from the conservation of public lands and
result in deteriorated rangelands.”
The Public Lands Council is calling on
BLM, USFS and USFWS to provide clear instruction at the field level that
livestock grazing is not a significant threat, livestock grazing should
not be held to a standard that is not ecologically possible in some
sites, and that reducing numbers and utilization of public lands will
only increase the fuel load.
Press Release
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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