Los Angeles Times

Imperiled frog has legal setback

Supreme Court puts limits on Endangered Species Act.

- By David G. Savage david.savage@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday limited the reach of the Endangered Species Act, setting aside a lower court ruling that afforded protection to an area where threatened animals do not live but might one day with significan­t changes.

The justices, in a unanimous but narrowly written decision, questioned whether a wooded area in Louisiana could be deemed under the law as a “critical habitat” for endangered frogs who might be able to live there in the future if some trees were removed.

The roughly 100 remaining dusky gopher frogs live in a single pond in a wooded area nearby in Mississipp­i.

The justices did not decide whether the Louisiana area could be a protected habitat.

Instead, they sent the case back to the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans to reconsider the matter and make a final decision.

However, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said in his opinion that the “critical habitat” of an endangered species “must also be a habitat.”

The 8-0 ruling is a partial victory for the Weyerhaeus­er Co. and other developmen­t companies that challenged the broad habitat protection­s imposed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Environmen­talists emphasized the ruling was quite limited and left open the possibilit­y that the Louisiana habitat for the frog could win protection.

“While we’re disappoint­ed, the ruling doesn’t weaken the mandate to protect habitat for endangered wildlife,” said Collette Adkins, a lawyer for the Center for Biological Diversity. “We’re hopeful the 5th Circuit will recognize the importance of protecting and restoring habitats for endangered wildlife.”

The case was heard on the first Monday in October, and the eight justices sounded closely split.

Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh took no part in the decision because the case was heard a week before he won confirmati­on in the Senate.

The four more liberal justices spoke in defense of the Fish and Wildlife Service, while the conservati­ves questioned how a critical habitat could include an area where the endangered frog did not live and could not live unless changes were made.

In the end, the chief justice found a way to bring both sides together by deciding very little.

In one section, the Endangered Species Act calls for protecting habitat that is “essential to the conservati­on of the species.”

The 5th Circuit, in a 2-1 decision, agreed with the Fish and Wildlife Service that the designated forestland in Louisiana was “essential to the conservati­on” of the tiny endangered frogs.

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