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chatnoir...
Posted: Mon Jul 21, 2008 10:31 am
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http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/greenspace/2008/07/work-in-progres.html

Gray wolves get back their endangered species status, for now.
3:02 PM, July 19, 2008


Gray wolves regained endangered-species protections Friday when a
federal judge in Montana granted a preliminary injunction to
environmentalists, who had challenged the wolves' delisting.

The decision came just months before planned fall hunts in Montana,
Wyoming and Idaho, which will now be canceled.

U.S. District Court Judge Donald W. Molloy issued a strongly worded 40-
page critique of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's decision to
delist the gray wolves, calling it arbitrary and capricious. He said
the action "demonstrated a possibility of irreparable harm" to the
species. The injunction "ensures the species is not imperiled" while
the case continues to be litigated, the judge wrote.

The wildlife service "provides no new evidence or research to support
its change of course," Molloy wrote. "Congress does not intend agency
decision-making to be fickle. When it is, the line separating
rationality from arbitrariness and capriciousness is crossed."

Molloy pointed to the recovery criteria cited by the wildlife service
in 1994. Those criteria include "genetic exchange between
subpopulations" -- crossbreeding among scattered groups of wolves --
so the species would be genetically viable in the long term.

"Genetic exchange has not taken place," the judge wrote. He cited a
2007 study commissioned by the wildlife service itself.

Gray wolves once ranged from central Mexico to the Arctic. But by the
1930s, rampant hunting had virtually wiped them out across the
American West. In 1974, gray wolves were listed as endangered.

Since then, the federal government has spent about $27 million to
revive the wolves' population.

In 1995 and 1996, officials introduced 66 wolves to central Idaho and
Yellowstone National Park, aiming to establish a stable population of
at least 300 animals. When delisted earlier this year, wolves in the
northern Rockies numbered 1,513, the judge wrote. Wildlife service
officials say the population is increasing by about 24% a year.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife officials announced in February that gray
wolves would be removed from the endangered species list after what
they termed a successful 20-year effort to reestablish the wolves in
Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. Environmentalists sued.
 
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