The Denver Post

U.S. sets aside habitat for rare songbird

- Ry Susan Montoya Bryan

U.S. wildlife managers have set aside vast areas across several states as habitat critical to the survival of a rare songbird that migrates each year from Central and South America to breeding grounds in Mexico and the United States.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced the final habitat designatio­n for the western yellow-billed cuckoo on Tuesday. It covers about 467 square miles along hundreds of miles of rivers and streams in the Western states.

Most breeding in the U.S. occurs in Arizona and New Mexico, but the habitat designatio­n also includes areas in California, Colorado, Utah, Texas and Idaho.

The designatio­n isn’t as big as proposed. Wildlife managers opted to exclude more than 300 square miles of potential habitat after considerin­g updated informatio­n about ongoing conservati­on activities, the lack of suitable habitat in some areas and potential interferen­ce with critical infrastruc­ture.

“This designatio­n identifies important feeding and breeding grounds for the cuckoo to support the species’ recovery while also balancing the need in finding solutions that support current and future land-use plans,” Michael Fris, field supervisor for the Sacramento, Calif., Fish and Wildlife Office, said in a statement.

A habitat plan that spanned more than 850 square miles was floated in 2014 but never approved. The Trump administra­tion proposed a smaller area in 2020, prompting the latest round of public comments. As a result, the designatio­n issued this week by the Biden administra­tion was further reduced.

“This failure reflects the real need for the Biden administra­tion to bring in new leadership and reform the agency,” said Brian Segee, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, a group that works to protect endangered species.

Federal biologists describe the cuckoo as an elusive species. Difficult to observe, it selects its nesting spots based on habitat conditions and the availabili­ty of food.

That means breeding habitat not suitable one year may become suitable the next because of increased rainfall or flooding, while favorable areas might degrade the next year.

Each spring and fall, the cuckoo uses river corridors as routes to travel between its wintering and breeding grounds. Nesting pairs find refuge in willows, cottonwood­s and other trees along waterways. Once their chicks hatch, their voracious appetites for insects help them fuel up for the return trip south.

Listed as threatened in 2014, biologists say the bird has seen population declines because of loss of riparian habitat and habitat fragmentat­ion resulting from agricultur­e, dams and river management, erosion, overgrazin­g and competitio­n from exotic plants.

 ?? Peter Pearsall, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service ?? U.S. wildlife managers have set aside vast areas across several states as habitat critical to the survival of the yellow-billed cuckoo.
Peter Pearsall, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service U.S. wildlife managers have set aside vast areas across several states as habitat critical to the survival of the yellow-billed cuckoo.

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