The Arizona Republic

Trappers ask court to nix fur lawsuit

Activists want to block export of bobcat pelts

- Matthew Brown

BILLINGS, Mont. – Fur trappers are asking a federal judge to throw out a lawsuit from wildlife advocates who want to block the export of bobcat pelts from the United States.

Attorneys for trapping organizati­ons said in recent court filings that the lawsuit against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service infringes on the authority of state and tribal government­s to manage their wildlife.

The plaintiffs in the case allege the government’s export program doesn’t protect against the accidental trapping of imperiled species such as Canada lynx.

More than 30,000 bobcat pelts were exported in 2015, the most recent year for which data was available, according to wildlife officials. The pelts typically are used to make fur garments and accessorie­s. Russia, China, Canada and Greece are top destinatio­ns, according to a trapping industry representa­tive and government reports.

Federal officials in February concluded trapping bobcats and other animals did not have a significan­t impact on lynx population­s.

The Fish and Wildlife Service regulates trade in animal and plant parts according to the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species, or CITES, which the U.S. ratified in 1975.

The advocates’ lawsuit would “do away with the CITES export program,” according to attorneys for the Fur Informatio­n Council of America, Montana Trappers Associatio­n and National Trappers Associatio­n.

“They are seeking to interfere with the way the States and Tribes manage their wildlife, by forcing them to limit, if not eliminate, the harvesting of the Furbearers and at the very least restrict the means by which trapping is conducted,” attorneys Ira Kasdan and Gary Leistico wrote in their motion to dismiss the case.

Bobcats are not considered an endangered species. But the internatio­nal trade in their pelts is regulated because they are “look-alikes” for other wildlife population­s that are protected under U.S. law.

Critics of the government export program argue the government review completed in February did not look closely enough at how many lynx trappers inadverten­tly catch in traps set for bobcats or other furbearing species.

Pete Frost, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said the fur industry’s move to throw out the case “seeks to deprive citizens of their right to court review of the federal pelt export program.”

Between 2.3 million and 3.6 million bobcats lived in the U.S., with population­s that were stable or increasing in at least 40 states, according to a 2010 study from researcher­s at Cornell University and the University of Montana.

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