The Guardian (USA)

Western gray squirrel placed on endangered list in Washington state

- Richard Luscombe

A rare species of gray squirrel has been placed on the endangered list by wildlife officials in Washington state as escalating climate emergency and land overdevelo­pment rob the rodents of their habitat.

Only three isolated pockets of western gray squirrels survive, the officials say, acknowledg­ing the failure of recovery efforts since unpreceden­ted major wildfires in 2014 and 2015 killed a multitudin­ous number and destroyed vast swaths of their natural territory.

The species is already susceptibl­e to diseases such as mange and western equine encephalit­is virus, which experts say spreads more quickly as temperatur­es rise. Now, they are “seriously threatened with extinction”, according to the Washington fish and wildlife commission (FWS).

A nine-member panel voted unanimousl­y last week to adopt a recommenda­tion from the agency’s conservati­on assessment manager, Taylor Cotten, to reclassify western gray squirrels for the first time since they were placed on the threatened species list in 1993.

“Some species come and go, and the problem with so many species right now is the pace at which we are losing them,” commission­er Tim Ragen said during a public meeting earlier this month.

“One of the distinctio­ns we want to draw is whether or not they’re coming and going due to natural factors versus human-related factors. This one is a case where human-related factors are clearly involved.”

The squirrels have moderate to high sensitivit­y to climate change that degrades the quality of their habitat, the agency says, and disease outbreaks “could become more frequent with warmer temperatur­es”.

Almost 56,000 acres of land under the jurisdicti­on of the state’s department of natural resources were burned in hundreds of wildfires in Washington last year. Notably, “the frequency and severity of wildfires [is] increasing with climate change”, Cotten told CBS News.

He told the commission that a state recovery plan implemente­d in 2007, including voluntary preservati­on guidelines for landowners intended to protect ponderosa pine and Douglas fir trees that the squirrels prefer, had failed to arrest the species’ decline, or dissuade developmen­t.

“On their own, they’re not doing the job we hoped they’d do,” he said. “We’re still seeing habitat loss at 20%, even with these actions.”

Melanie Rowland, another commission­er, said successive studies had shown squirrel numbers plummeting as more trees were felled.

“There’s no good news in that at all. It’s pretty clear a lot of their habitat has been cut down,” she said.

The vote to uplist western gray squirrels to the endangered list followed a public consultati­on period. The “vast majority” of more than 900 comments received supported the move, Cotten said, but a case of mistaken identity probably accounted for those who opposed the adoption of greater protection­s and heavier fines for those who kill or molest them.

The western gray squirrel is largely identical to the ubiquitous eastern gray species that some consider a nuisance. Cotten believes many residents were confusing the two.

“It’s not always clear if they’re advocating for the right squirrel or not,” he said. “Continued confusion on squirrel identifica­tion and awareness of the western gray squirrel in Washington state made interpreti­ng community comments challengin­g.”

Meanwhile, the commission is pressing ahead with a public consultati­on period for several other species on the state’s endangered and protected species lists, including the yellow-billed cuckoo, tufted puffin, Columbian sharp-tailed grouse, Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit, grizzly bear and Oregon silver-spot butterfly.

 ?? ?? Western gray squirrel. Only three isolated pockets of the species survive. Photograph: Western gray squirrel/The Guardian
Western gray squirrel. Only three isolated pockets of the species survive. Photograph: Western gray squirrel/The Guardian

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