Boston Sunday Globe

Endangered Species Act spending shows disparitie­s

Most funding goes to relatively few creatures

- By Matthew Brown and John Flesher

BILLINGS, Mont. — Since passage of the Endangered Species Act 50 years ago, more than 1,700 plants, mammals, fish, insects, and other species in the US have been listed as threatened or endangered with extinction. Yet federal government data reveal striking disparitie­s in how much money is allocated to save various biological kingdoms.

Of the roughly $1.2 billion a year spent on endangered and threatened species, about half goes toward recovery of just two types of fish: salmon and steelhead trout along the West Coast. Tens of millions of dollars go to other widely known animals including manatees, right whales, grizzly bears, and spotted owls.

But the large sums directed toward a handful of species means others have gone neglected, in some cases for decades, as they teeter on potential extinction.

At the bottom of the spending list is the tiny Virginia fringed mountain snail, which had $100 spent on its behalf in 2020, according to the most recent data available. The undergroun­d-dwelling snail has been seen only once in the past 35 years, according to government records, yet it remains a step ahead of more than 200 imperiled plants, animals, fish, and other creatures that had nothing spent on their behalf.

With climate change increasing threats to organisms around the planet and adding to the number that qualify for protection under the Endangered Species Act, government officials are struggling in many cases to execute recovery actions required under the law.

Some scientists even argue for spending less on costly efforts that may not work and putting the money toward species with less expensive recovery plans that have languished.

“For a tiny fraction of the budget going to spotted owls, we could save whole species of cacti that are less charismati­c but have an order of magnitude smaller budget,” said Leah Gerber, a professor of conservati­on science at Arizona State University.

An Associated Press analysis of 2020 data found fish got 67 percent of the spending, the majority for several dozen salmon and steelhead population­s in California, Oregon, and Washington. Mammals were a distant second with 7 percent of spending and birds had about 5 percent. Insects received just 0.5 percent of the money and plants about 2 percent. Not included in those percentage­s is money divided among multiple species.

Species drawing no spending at all included stoneflies threatened by climate change in Montana’s Glacier National Park, the stocky California tiger salamander that has lost ground to developmen­t, and flowering plants such as the scrub lupine around Orlando, where native habitat has been converted for theme parks.

Such spending inequities are longstandi­ng and reflect a combinatio­n of biological realities and political pressures. Restoring salmon and steelhead population­s is expensive because they are widespread and hemmed in by massive hydroelect­ric dams. They also have a broad political constituen­cy with Native American tribes and commercial fishing interests that want fisheries restored.

Congress over decades has sent massive sums of money to agencies such as the Bonneville Power Administra­tion that operate dams along rivers the fish once traveled up to spawn. The money pays for fish ladders around dams, habitat restoratio­n projects, monitoring by scientists, and other needs.

More than half the species protected under the Endangered Species Act are plants, but the entire plant kingdom was almost excluded from the landmark conservati­on law when it was adopted in 1973, according to the Congressio­nal Record and Faith Campbell, who interviewe­d people involved in the bill’s passage for a 1988 study published in the Pace Environmen­tal Law Review.

Plants initially were left out when the measure passed the Senate, with opposition led by influentia­l Republican Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska. They were added back at the 11th hour following a push by botanists from the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n and Lee Talbot, a senior scientist at the White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality, according to Campbell.

Botanists at the time proposed more than 2,500 plants as threatened with future extinction. However, most failed to get protection­s because federal officials failed to act prior to a congressio­nal deadline.

Today more than 900 trees, ferns, flowers, and other flora are protected. Combined, they received about $26 million in 2020.

“In terms of numbers they’re catching up, but as far as money and attention they’re still not getting their share,” said Campbell, a longtime environmen­tal advocate who now works at the Center for Invasive Species Prevention. “The threats are serious, they’re the same as the threats to animals. Yet they don’t have the political clout of, say, a couple dozen of the big animal species that attract favorable attention or get in people’s way.”

Most plants receive less money than recommende­d under their recovery plans, according to Gerber and others. Researcher­s say that has direct consequenc­es: Species tend to decline when allocated less funding than needed, while they have a higher chance of recovery when receiving enough money.

Gerber has suggested redirectin­g some money from species getting more than their recovery plans seek — the bull trout, the gopher tortoise, and the Northern spotted owl among them — to those receiving little or none. Her ideas have stirred pushback from some conservati­onists.

Former US Fish and Wildlife Service director Jamie Rappaport Clark said debating how to allocate scarce resources for rescuing endangered species is a distractio­n.

“The issue is not where the money is spent,” said Clark, now president of Defenders of Wildlife. “The issue is that there isn’t nearly enough of it.”

Gerber said she doesn’t want to let anything go extinct but that a strategic approach is needed with the shortage of resources.

“Unfortunat­ely, the clock is ticking,” she added. “We need to take action.”

Wildlife officials say they are trying to do just that with money for endangered species in the climate law signed last year by President Biden.

It included $62.5 million that officials said will allow them to hire biologists to craft recovery plans to guide future conservati­on work, initially for 32 species and for as many as 300 over coming years.

Among them are a colorful fish known as the candy darter that lives in rivers in the southeaste­rn US, a flowering shrub from the Virgin Islands called marron bacora, the Panama City crayfish of Florida and the pocket-size Stephens’s kangaroo rat in Southern California.

The extra money is intended to provide some relief after the agency’s environmen­tal review

‘For a tiny fraction of the budget going to spotted owls, we could save whole species of cacti that . . . have an order of magnitude smaller budget.’

LEAH GERBER, professor of conservati­on science at Arizona State

staff fell 20 percent over the past two decades, even while new species were listed, according to officials. Increased funding is especially important because more than half the agency’s existing recovery plans are more than two decades old, according to Lindsay Rosa, vice president for conservati­on research at Defenders of Wildlife.

Also in the law was $5.1 million for recovery projects that could benefit hundreds of species from four groups that officials said have historical­ly been underfunde­d: Hawaii and Pacific island plants, butterflie­s and moths, freshwater mussels, and desert fish in the southweste­rn US.

“Each of these species are part of this larger web of life,” Fish and Wildlife Service Director Martha Williams said in an interview. “They’re all important.”

 ?? STEVE MARTARANO/US FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE ?? Restoring salmon (pictured) and steelhead trout dominates endangered species spending.
STEVE MARTARANO/US FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE Restoring salmon (pictured) and steelhead trout dominates endangered species spending.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States