East Bay Times

Judge orders U.S. to decide if wolverines need protection

- By Matthew Brown

BILLINGS, MONT. >> A federal judge has given U.S. wildlife officials 18 months to decide if wolverines should be protected under the Endangered Species Act, following years of dispute over how much risk climate change and other threats pose to the rare and elusive predators.

The order from U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy comes after environmen­talists challenged a 2020 decision under the Trump administra­tion to withhold protection­s for the animals in the lower 48 states, where no more than 300 of the animals are thought to remain.

Environmen­talists argued that wolverines face localized extinction as a result of climate change, habitat fragmentat­ion and low genetic diversity. Warming temperatur­es are expected to diminish the mountain snowpack that wolverines rely on to dig dens to birth and raise their young.

The Fish and Wildlife Service received a petition to protect wolverines in 2000 and first proposed protection­s in 2010. It later sought to withdraw that proposal, but was blocked by a federal judge who said the snow-dependent animals were “squarely in the path of climate change.”

The 2020 rejection of protection­s under former President Donald Trump was based on research suggesting the animals' prevalence was expanding, not contractin­g. Officials at the time predicted enough snow would persist at high elevations for wolverines to den in mountain snowfields each spring despite warming temperatur­es.

Government attorneys in February told Molloy that wildlife officials wanted to re-evaluate the 2020 decision and asked that it stay in effect while that review was completed. But the judge rejected that request and struck down the decision.

That means a 2013 determinat­ion from officials that made wolverines eligible for potential protection­s is back in effect.

“We are hoping this time

is the charm and the Fish and Wildlife Service will follow the courts' directives to rely on the best available climate science to make the right call to protect wolverines in the lower 48 states,” said Matthew Bishop, an attorney with the Western Environmen­tal Law Center.

Wolverines, also known as “mountain devils,” were wiped out across most of the U.S. by the early 1900s following unregulate­d trapping and poisoning campaigns.

Wildlife officials have previously estimated that 250 to 300 wolverines survive in remote areas of Montana, Wyoming, Idaho and Washington state. The animals in recent years also have been documented in California, Utah, Colorado and Oregon.

 ?? CHRIS STERMER — CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE VIA AP ?? A remote camera set by biologist Chris Stermer shows a mountain wolverine in the Tahoe National Forest near Truckee in 2016, considered a rare sighting in the state.
CHRIS STERMER — CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE VIA AP A remote camera set by biologist Chris Stermer shows a mountain wolverine in the Tahoe National Forest near Truckee in 2016, considered a rare sighting in the state.

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