Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Old papers fuel new bid to halt lithium mine

It’s called threat to a rare flower

- By Scott Sonner

RENO — Few people had ever heard of Tiehm’s buckwheat when conservati­onists filed a petition two years ago to list the desert wildflower as an endangered species.

But federal documents reviewed by The Associated Press show that the rare plant at the center of a fight over a proposed lithium mine in Nevada has been on the government’s radar for more than two decades.

Conservati­onists who discovered the records are urging the Bureau of Land Management to take administra­tive action to create a mile buffer around the flower while the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service considers formal protection under the Endangered Species Act.

“BLM recognized that the habitat of Tiehm’s buckwheat needed to be protected 23 years ago,” said Naomi Fraga, the California Botanic Garden conservati­on director who filed the original federal listing petition in 2019.

The scientist the plant is named after — Arnold Tiehm, pronounced like a sports “team” — suggested in 1994 that the site be declared a special botanical area and made off-limits to mining.

A year later, the supervisor­y botanist for the Nevada agency now considerin­g state protection for the plant recommende­d the BLM designate it an Area of Critical Environmen­tal Concern. And in 1998, the bureau listed it among those nominated for such designatio­n.

The Nevada site remains the only place on earth the plant is known to exist. The Center for Biological Diversity says Australia-based Ioneer’s proposed lithium mine about 200 miles northwest of Las Vegas would destroy it.

“Management under BLM’s default ‘multiple-use policy’ has utterly failed to adequately protect Tiehm’s buckwheat or its habitat,” the center said in its March 29 petition seeking the designatio­n. “Tiehm’s buckwheat is staring down the barrel of extinction.”

Fish and Wildlife Service initiated a formal 12-month review of the plant last July with a listing decision due this summer.

Discovered in 1983

The flower was discovered at Rhyolite Ridge in the Silver Peak Range in 1983 and named a new species in 1985.

Arnold Tiehm’s 1994 report for Nevada’s Natural Heritage Program said 17,000 plants located were limited to five sites, noting all five were “open to mineral entry and exploratio­n which may modify or destroy habitat in the future.” He recommende­d “BLM remove the sites from multiple-use status, or at least from mineral entry.”

James Moreland, now supervisor­y botanist for Nevada’s Division of Natural Heritage, said in a 1995 report for Fish and Wildlife that “based on current knowledge (it) meets the definition of a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act.”

“Aggressive measures are needed to prevent its extinction, including frequent monitoring, pursuit by BLM of ACEC (Area of Critical Environmen­tal Concern) designatio­n with minerals withdrawal­s, and … listing as threatened if necessary to prevent further declines,” he wrote.

Rhyolite Ridge was among seven Areas of Critical Environmen­tal Concern the bureau proposed in its 1994 draft environmen­tal impact statement for the Tonopah district’s Resource Management Plan.

Documents indicate the agency dropped all seven from its final decision in 1997 due to opposition from local counties, but listed it again in a 1998 Federal Register notice seeking additional nomination­s.

‘Evidence of neglect’

Patrick Donnelly, the Center for Biological Diversity’s Nevada director, found it on the notice’s brief descriptio­n of 43 locations already nominated, including volcanic lava flows, petroglyph­s, ghost towns, Joshua trees and, at Rhyolite Ridge, an “uncommon plant.”

“We’d been kicking around the idea of proposing ACEC designatio­n for the Tiehm’s buckwheat habitat for a while, but finding this ancient evidence of neglect by BLM was all the impetus we needed to move forward,” Donnelly said.

Bureau spokesman Jess Harvey said Thursday the agency would consider such a proposal the next time it develops amendments to the district resource management plan, but none currently is planned.

Ioneer declined to comment but said it expects final approval of the mine before the end of the year.

Last month, it completed an $80 million stock sale to public investors in a capital-raising effort led by Goldman Sachs that Ioneer’s managing director Bernard Rowe said will allow it to accelerate developmen­t of the mine.

 ?? Scott Sonner The Associated Press file ?? Greenhouse­s at the University of Nevada, Reno contain the rare desert wildflower Tiehm’s buckwheat.
Scott Sonner The Associated Press file Greenhouse­s at the University of Nevada, Reno contain the rare desert wildflower Tiehm’s buckwheat.
 ?? Center for Biological Diversity ?? A site in Nevada near a proposed lithium mine is the only place on earth where Tiehm’s buckwheat is known to exist.
Center for Biological Diversity A site in Nevada near a proposed lithium mine is the only place on earth where Tiehm’s buckwheat is known to exist.

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