Center for Biological Diversity


For Immediate Release, October 17, 2016

Contact: Andrea Santarsiere, (303) 854-7748, asantarsiere@biologicaldiversity.org

Feds to Reconsider Endangered Species Act Protection for Wolverine

VICTOR, Idaho— The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced today that it is reopening the public-comment period on its 2013 proposed rule to protect North American wolverines as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. The agency’s move comes after the Center for Biological Diversity and allies challenged its sudden 2014 decision to withdraw that proposed rule. In response to the lawsuit, the District Court of Montana ruled in April that the withdrawal was illegal and ordered the Service to reconsider the proposed rule. This comment period is a result of that lawsuit.

Wolverine
Photo by Steve Kroschel, USFWS. Photos are available for media use.

It is estimated that no more than 300 wolverines now remain in the contiguous United States, living in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. Wolverines require high-elevation areas with persistent snow cover for denning, and climate change threatens the availability of den sites and reproductive success of the species.

“All the science shows that climate change and other threats are driving wolverines in the lower 48 toward extinction,” said Andrea Santarsiere, a senior attorney at the Center. “We hope the Fish and Wildlife Service gets it right this time and provides these feisty mountain predators with the protection they need to survive.”

Last month the Fish and Wildlife Service released a seven-year workplan identifying species that would be evaluated for listing under the Endangered Species Act. This workplan noted that a final decision for wolverines would be issued in 2018. 

“The wolverine can’t wait two more years for federal protection,” said Santarsiere. “We urge the Service to speed up efforts to get this species the protection it desperately needs before it’s too late.”

The Center and others first petitioned for the wolverines’ protection in 1995. 

In litigation the Center was represented by Earthjustice and joined by Conservation Northwest, Friends of the Clearwater, Greater Yellowstone Coalition, Idaho Conservation League, Jackson Hole Conservation Alliance, Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center and Rocky Mountain Wild. The case was consolidated with another case challenging the withdrawal, filed by Defenders of Wildlife.

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.


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