Center for Biological Diversity

For Immediate Release, December 13, 2016

Contact: Jenny Loda, (510) 844-7100 x 336, jloda@biologicaldiversity.org

Settlement Secures Recovery Plan, Calls for 34,000 Protected Acres for Rare Santa Barbara Salamander

LOS ANGELES, Calif.— In accordance with a settlement with the Center for Biological Diversity, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has released a final recovery plan for the endangered Santa Barbara County population of the California tiger salamander. The plan calls for purchase and permanent protection of approximately 34,000 acres of the salamander’s breeding ponds and adjacent uplands.

“With a recovery plan we can fight threats like habitat destruction that have pushed these salamanders to the brink of extinction,” said Jenny Loda, a biologist and attorney with the Center who is dedicated to protecting rare amphibians and reptiles. “This plan gives us hope for one of our most imperiled salamanders.”

The recovery plan focuses on alleviating the threat of habitat loss and fragmentation by permanently protecting breeding ponds and their adjacent uplands through acquisition and conservation easements. The plan also calls for restoring breeding habitats, as well as assessing and reducing risks of non-native predators, road mortality, hybridization with non-native tiger salamanders, contaminants and disease.

“Without adequate habitat protections, these salamanders can’t migrate safely between their wetland and upland homes,” said Loda. “I hope the habitat protections and other actions identified in this plan will be put in place right away to help move these salamanders toward recovery.”

Although Santa Barbara County California tiger salamanders have been protected under the Endangered Species Act for more than a decade, the Fish and Wildlife Service had not developed a required recovery plan to guide management of the species. In April 2012 the Center sued the Interior Department for its failure to develop such a plan for the endangered salamanders; the plan released today is the result of the December 2012 settlement agreement that resulted from this lawsuit.

Recovery plans are the main tool for identifying actions necessary to save endangered species from extinction and eventually remove their protection under the Endangered Species Act. Research by the Center has found that the status of species with dedicated recovery plans for two or more years is far more likely to be improving than the status of those without.

Background
The California tiger salamander (Ambystoma californiense) is a large, stocky, terrestrial salamander with a broad, rounded snout and gorgeous black-and-yellow body. These amphibians are restricted to vernal pools and seasonal ponds in grassland and oak savannah communities in central California. The primary cause of their decline is the loss and fragmentation of habitat through human activities and encroachment of nonnative predators.

The Santa Barbara population of California tiger salamanders was listed as an endangered species in 2000. This species is endemic to the northern portion of Santa Barbara County, Calif., and is genetically and geographically distinct from other California tiger salamanders. Only 60 breeding ponds, distributed across six metapopulations, remain in Santa Barbara County.

For more information about the Center’s campaign to curb the amphibian and reptile extinction crisis, please visit http://BiologicalDiversity.org/herps.

California tiger salamander
Photo courtesy USFWS. This image is available for media use.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.1 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

www.biologicaldiversity.org

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