TUCSON, Ariz.— As part of a landmark agreement with
the Center for Biological Diversity, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today proposed
Endangered Species Act protections for the Southwest’s narrow-headed
garter snake and northern
Mexican garter snake. In New Mexico and Arizona , the agency also
proposed to protect more than 420,000 acres of critical
habitat for the Mexican garter snake and more than 210,000 acres for the
narrow-headed garter snake. Threatened by nonnative species and the loss and
degradation of riparian habitats, these non-venomous, aquatic snakes have
undergone massive declines in recent decades.
“These two southwestern snakes have been in trouble
for years, so I’m glad they’re finally getting the protection they desperately
need to survive,” said Collette Adkins Giese, an attorney at the Center who
focuses on the protection of imperiled amphibians and reptiles. “Protecting
these snakes and their beleaguered habitat in the Southwest will benefit every
other animal that depends on these river systems.”
The main culprits in the decline of the Mexican and
narrow-headed garter snakes are the destruction of their streamside habitats
due to livestock grazing, water withdrawal, and agricultural and urban sprawl,
as well as the introduction and spread of nonnative species, such as sunfish,
bass and crayfish. The snakes have undergone dramatic range-wide declines in
the United States
and are now almost entirely limited to small, isolated populations that are at
risk of extirpation. Indeed, the Fish and Wildlife Service found that “83
percent of the northern Mexican garter snake’s populations in the United States
and 76 percent of the narrow-headed garter snake’s populations occur at low
densities and are likely not viable.”
“The decline of these snakes is symptomatic of
widespread declines in the aquatic fauna across the Southwest,” said Adkins
Giese. “These snakes depend on native fish and amphibians as prey, and the
widespread loss of these snakes and their prey reflects a severe collapse of
the food web in Southwest rivers and streams.”
The Center petitioned for the Mexican garter snake
in 2003. After several lawsuits, it was designated a candidate for Endangered
Species Act protection in 2008. In 2011 the Center submitted a status
report documenting the need for Endangered Species Act protection for the
narrow-headed garter snake. Under a historic 2011 settlement
agreement with the Center that requires the Fish and Wildlife Service to
issue protection decisions for 757 species around the country, the agency must
make a final decision about protection for the snakes in fiscal year 2014.
Contact: Collette Adkins Giese, (651)
955-3821
___________________________________________
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!