Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lawsuit looms over tiny fish in Nevada, Utah

Conservati­onists say agency delaying action

- By Scott Sonner

RENO — Conservati­onists have notified U.S. wildlife officials that they will sue over delayed decisions related to protection­s for two rare fish species that are threatened by groundwate­r pumping in the drought-stricken West.

The Center for Biological Diversity sent a formal notice of intent to sue the Fish and Wildlife Service last week over the Fish Lake Valley tui chub near the California-nevada line and the least chub in southwest Utah.

Utah and Nevada are the driest states in the country, and the lawsuits are among the many fronts on which conservati­onists are battling water districts and the users they cater to over plans to siphon water to either maintain or expand consumptio­n.

The outcome of the court fights will likely have major implicatio­ns for states’ parched valleys and the people and species that inhabit them.

The group seeking federal listings under the Endangered Species Act says the high-desert springs where the minnows live are threatened by water allocation­s for traditiona­l agricultur­al use as well as urban developmen­t plans.

The Fish and Wildlife Service belatedly concluded in August there was enough evidence the tui chub in Nevada was at risk of extinction — primarily due to over-pumping of water for farms and ranches — to warrant a yearlong review to determine if it should be listed.

The so-called 90-day finding had been due in June 2021, three months after the center petitioned for the listing. The center also noted in its Nov. 15 letter to the agency that the yearlong review should have been done in March.

Fish and Wildlife Service officials did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Wednesday. The agency acknowledg­ed in its August finding that the petition “presents substantia­l scientific or commercial informatio­n indicating that listing the Fish Lake Valley tui chub as an endangered or threatened species may be warranted.”

The only place in the world that the 5-inch-long, olive-colored tui chub still exists is in a basin in Esmeralda County between Reno and Las Vegas.

“The Fish Lake Valley tui chub is staring extinction in the face because of the catastroph­ic overuse of groundwate­r in its native range,” said Patrick Donnelly, Great Basin director at the Center for Biological Diversity.

Lake Valley’s groundwate­r levels have declined as much as 2.5 feet per year over the past half-century, causing a cumulative drawdown of more than 75 feet since 1973, the listing petition said.

Donnelly said active geothermal leases and lithium claims nearby, if developed, also could put the springs at risk.

In Utah, more than half the remaining wild population­s of the least chub are jeopardize­d by proposed groundwate­r pumping to support growth in Cedar City, about 170 miles northeast of Las Vegas.

The group petitioned to list that 2-inch-long, gold-colored minnow in September 2021, citing threats posed by the Pine Valley Water Supply Project. An initial finding and 12-month review for that species also are past due, the group said.

Once widely distribute­d in Utah’s Bonneville Basin, the least chub has only seven remaining wild population­s and about a dozen refuge population­s where it’s been reintroduc­ed.

“Significan­t habitat loss and alteration, as well as competitio­n and predation from non-native species, have driven this species close to extinction,” the center wrote.

Officials from Utah’s Central Iron County Water Conservanc­y District want to spend roughly $260 million to lay about 70 miles of buried pipes to transport water from an aquifer below the Pine Valley, an undevelope­d rural swath north of the district’s population center in Cedar City. They say limits on their local groundwate­r supply and an influx of new residents require they diversify their water supply to prepare for the future.

District General Manager Paul Monroe said a review of groundwate­r assessment­s found any impacts on the springs would be “less than significan­t.”

The project has been opposed for decades by neighborin­g Beaver County, Native American tribes, some ranchers and Nevada counties worried that siphoning water from Pine Valley will affect nearby aquifers.

 ?? Spenser Heaps The Associated Press ?? A bucket of least chub are released at Darwin Bundy’s property in Fairfield, Utah. Conservati­onists have notified U.S. wildlife officials they’re going to sue over illegal delays in decisions on protection­s sought for rare fish species in Nevada and Utah.
Spenser Heaps The Associated Press A bucket of least chub are released at Darwin Bundy’s property in Fairfield, Utah. Conservati­onists have notified U.S. wildlife officials they’re going to sue over illegal delays in decisions on protection­s sought for rare fish species in Nevada and Utah.

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