U.S.
denies protections for wolverines, outrages conservationists
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[August 13, 2014]
By Laura Zuckerman
SALMON Idaho (Reuters) - U.S. wildlife
managers on Tuesday denied federal protections for rare wolverines,
outraging conservationists but pleasing Western states that opposed
adding the reclusive but feisty member of the weasel family to the
endangered and threatened species list.
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Last year the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed applying
Endangered Species Act safeguards for the estimated 300 wolverines
left in the Lower 48 states, most of which inhabit the high country
of Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.
The service had said global warming was reducing mountain snows the
animals use to dig dens and store food.
But on Tuesday federal wildlife managers said there was
"insufficient evidence" that climate change would harm wolverines,
which resemble small bears with bushy tails and which are known for
their ferocious defense of their young.
"After carefully considering the best available science, the Service
has determined that the effects of climate change are not likely to
place the wolverine in danger of extinction now or in the
foreseeable future," Fish and Wildlife Service spokesman Gavin Shire
said in a statement.
The decision was welcomed in states such as Montana, which will
determine next year whether to reinstate a limited wolverine
trapping season that was suspended in 2012 after a lawsuit by
conservationists.
Listing would have banned trapping of wolverines, which are prized
for their fur, and imposed restrictions on snowmobiling and other
winter recreation in areas inhabited by the solitary creatures.
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Noah Greenwald, endangered species director for the Center for
Biological Diversity, said Tuesday's decision was part of a
disturbing trend by the Obama administration of managing imperiled
wildlife based on pressure by states and industry instead of
science.
"All of the science points to the wolverine being in serious
trouble. The Service's own biologists said global warming was
pushing the wolverine toward extinction and urged listing," he said.
(Reporting by Laura Zuckerman; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Sandra
Maler)
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