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		a first for a fish, Oregon chub removed from endangered list 
		
		 
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		[February 18, 2015] 
		By Courtney Sherwood 
		  
		 PORTLAND, Ore. (Reuters) - For the first 
		time, a fish has been removed from U.S. Endangered Species Act 
		protection as federal officials declared on Tuesday that a tiny 
		shimmering minnow found only in an Oregon valley was no longer in danger 
		of extinction. 
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			 Millions of the two-inch (5-cm) fish, the Oregon chub, once swam 
			in waters surrounding Western Oregon's Willamette River. But their 
			numbers declined sharply over the past century as wetlands were 
			drained for development and due to predation by nonnative fish like 
			largemouth bass. 
			 
			Fewer than 1,000 remained in just eight wetlands in 1993 when the 
			chub gained protection under the Endangered Species Act. The fish 
			was upgraded from "endangered" to "threatened" status in 2004, as 
			populations began to rebound. 
			 
			Today, more than 150,000 chubs are estimated in 80 sites along the 
			river valley because of recovery efforts like restoring water flows, 
			floodplain reconstruction and stocking in private ponds. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			The fish's resurgence shows that habitat improvement and species 
			recovery efforts can succeed even in areas heavily impacted by 
			agriculture and urban development, said Paul Henson, Oregon 
			supervisor with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife service. 
			 
			"This shows the public that you can recover species and do it in a 
			way that works with local communities in a positive way, as opposed 
			to being a contentious big event," Henson said. 
			 
			The Oregon chub is not fished commercially, and improvements to its 
			habitat could be made at minimal cost to private landowners, both 
			factors that aided in efforts to boost its population, said Paul 
			Sheerer, leader of the native fish project for the Oregon Department 
			of Fish and Wildlife. 
			 
			
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			State officials had been cheering the Oregon chub's recovery as 
			other fish – including a trout and a sucker - also showed signs of 
			recovery under the Endangered Species Act, Sheerer said. 
			
			"It wasn't really a race, but we were feeling a little pressure, 
			thinking maybe we won't be the first," Sheerer said. 
			 
			U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe was scheduled to 
			formally announce the removal of the Oregon minnow from the 
			endangered species list at an event on Tuesday, but his flight from 
			Washington, D.C., was canceled due to snow. 
			 
			(Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Sandra Maler) 
			
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