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Bannerman said the agency is required to review each individual project "and move ahead only if there would be no long-term negative impact on the environment." "With that mandate ... we can give people an outlet to deal with a problem that if they took into their own hands could have longer-term negative impacts," she said. The agricultural commodities' groups said in their letter to Vilsack about a month ago that livestock losses to predation cost producers more than $125 million a year. "Without non-lethal and lethal predator control by Wildlife Services, these numbers could easily double or even triple," said Skye Krebs, an Oregon rancher and president of the Public Lands Council, which spearheaded the letter along with the National Cattlemen's Beef Association. "The agency provides a means for striking a balance in the wildlife-livestock interface, including limiting the spread of disease from wildlife," Krebs said. ___ On the Net: WildEarth Guardians: http://www.wildearthguardians.org/ USDA Wildlife Services: National Cattlemen's Beef Association: http://www.beef.org/
http://www.aphis.usda.gov/wildlife_damage/
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