Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Bumblebee gets endangered listing

Rusty patched has disappeare­d from 90 percent of range

- By JOHN FLESHER

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — The rusty patched bumblebee on Tuesday became the first officially endangered bee species in the continenta­l U.S., overcoming objections from some business interests and a last-minute delay ordered by the Trump administra­tion.

One of many bee types that have suffered steep population declines, the rusty patched has disappeare­d from about 90 percent of its range in the past 20 years. It previously was common across the East Coast and much of the Midwest, where it played a crucial role as a pollinator of crops and wild plants.

Its listing as an endangered species means the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will devise a plan for returning the imperiled bee to “a healthy and secure condition,” the U.S. Department of Interior said. “We will work with stakeholde­rs to ensure collaborat­ive conservati­on among landowners, farmers, industry and developers in the areas where the species is native.”

The Xerces Society for Invertebra­te Conservati­on, which filed the petition that triggered the government’s considerat­ion of the matter, said it was “thrilled to see one of North America’s most endangered species receive the protection it needs.”

“Now that the Fish and Wildlife Service has listed the rusty patched bumblebee as endangered, it stands a chance of surviving the many threats it faces,” said Sarina Jepsen, the group’s director of endangered species.

Scientists say disease, pesticide exposure, habitat loss and climate change are among possible reasons for the decline of the bee, named for the rusty reddish patch on the backs of workers and males. Most of the grasslands and tallgrass prairies where they once thrived have been converted to farms or urban areas.

Advocates said they hoped the recovery plan would also help other struggling pollinator­s, including bees and the monarch butterfly.

The bee’s endangered listing, approved by the service shortly before President Barack Obama left office, had been scheduled to take effect Feb. 10. But the Trump administra­tion, which has pledged to pare back federal regulation­s, said it would postpone the listing until Tuesday. Some environmen­tal groups had feared it would be canceled altogether.

The Natural Resources Defense Council filed a lawsuit over the delay, saying it had been ordered without required public notice and comment. On Tuesday, the group said the administra­tion had “reversed course and listed the rusty patched bumblebee as an endangered species just in the nick of time.”

“Federal protection­s may be the only thing standing between the bumblebee and extinction,” said Rebecca Riley, senior attorney with the group.

Six business organizati­ons petitioned the government earlier this month to push back the effective date to Jan. 11, 2018. The groups, including the American Petroleum Institute and the National Associatio­n of Home Builders, said the Obama administra­tion had acted hastily without adequately considerin­g how the designatio­n would affect human activities.

“Once the listing decision takes effect, virtually every industry operating within the species’ range — from agricultur­e and crop production to residentia­l and commercial developmen­t, from energy production and distributi­on to manufactur­ing, will be profoundly affected,” the petition said.

Too little is known about the bee’s undergroun­d nesting and hibernatio­n sites for developers to determine whether their work would do harm, the industry groups said. That may force businesses to choose between “abandoning billions of dollars in economic activities” or “blindly risking” a violation of the Endangered Species Act by going ahead with their projects, the groups said.

The Fish and Wildlife Service posted informatio­n on its website about how to determine whether an area being considered for developmen­t is likely to host rusty patched bumblebees and ways to meet legal requiremen­ts for protecting them.

The law prohibits killing, harassing or otherwise harming listed animals, although people can obtain permits that excuse limited “takings” of endangered species as a result of doing things that otherwise are legal.

WASHINGTON — The frigid top of the Earth just set yet another record for low levels of sea ice in what scientists say is a signal of an overheatin­g world. The extent of floating ice in the Arctic hit a new low for winter: 5.57 million square miles. That’s about 35,000 square miles — an area about the size of Maine — below 2015’s record. Last year had a shade more than 2015, but nearly a tied record.

This puts the Arctic in a “deep hole” as the crucial spring and summer melt season starts and more regions will likely be ice-free, said Mark Serreze, director of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado, which released the findings Wednesday.

“It’s a key part of the Earth’s climate system and we’re losing it,” he said. “We’re losing the ice in all seasons now.”

At the other end of the world, Antarctica, where sea ice reaches its lowest point of the year in March, also hit a record low mark. Antarctic sea ice varies widely unlike Arctic sea ice, which has steadily decreased.

The ice data center measures how wide sea ice extends based on satellite imagery. It’s harder to measure the thickness and overall volume, but data from the University of Washington show that as of late last month ice volume levels were down 42 percent from 1979, said polar science center chief Axel Schweiger.

Several scientists called the sea ice loss disturbing.

“It’s evidence that the climate at the top of the world continues to change faster than anywhere else on Earth with impacts to us that are still frankly unknown,” Pennsylvan­ia State University meteorolog­y professor and retired admiral David W. Titley said in an email.

Scientists blame a combinatio­n of natural random weather and manmade global warming from the burning of coal, oil and gas. The winter of 2016-2017 was unusually toasty and the Arctic saw three “extreme heat waves,” Serreze said.

 ?? SARAH FOLTZ JORDAN/THE XERCES SOCIETY VIA AP ?? A rusty patched bumblebee collects nectar in Minnesota. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officially designated the bee an endangered species — the first bee species in the continenta­l U.S. to receive federal protection under the Endangered Species Act.
SARAH FOLTZ JORDAN/THE XERCES SOCIETY VIA AP A rusty patched bumblebee collects nectar in Minnesota. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officially designated the bee an endangered species — the first bee species in the continenta­l U.S. to receive federal protection under the Endangered Species Act.

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