March 6,
2014
|
Arizona Game and Fish comments on recent jaguar
critical habitat announcement
|
On March 4, 2014, the Southwest Region
of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) notified the public that
the Service had designated 764,207 acres of land in Southern Arizona as
critical habitat for the rarely-present jaguar. This action completed the
third review by the Service that examines the need for jaguar critical
habitat in Arizona. The two prior reviews found that designation of
critical habitat in Arizona-New Mexico was not warranted. The Arizona Game
and Fish Department does not support the latest finding of the Service
that designating critical habitat is essential to the conservation of the
jaguar.
Game and Fish Assistant Director for Wildlife Management Jim deVos states, “I find it difficult to justify designating critical habitat for a species that is so rarely found in Arizona. In looking at the available data on the presence of jaguars, there has been no documentation of a female jaguar in Arizona for nearly a century. There have been long periods when no jaguar was even found in the state. Such designations should be based on good science and effective conservation, which are both lacking with this designation. This designation does nothing to further the conservation of the jaguar.” Based on the current information from Mexico, the closest breeding population of jaguars is approximately 130 miles south of the international border between Arizona and Sonora, Mexico. Further, for many decades, the observations of jaguars in Arizona have been individual males, which clearly do not constitute a “population” given the lack of females and/or breeding pairs. The American public has a reasonable expectation that when the Service lists a species or designates critical habitat for a species that the restrictions posed by these designations are in fact essential to that species’ conservation. “With the absence of any documented breeding pairs in the U.S. for many decades and with an estimated population of no less than 30,000 jaguars and more than 99 percent of the jaguar’s range occurring outside of the United States, the Service’s recent declaration of critical habitat undermines the congressional intent for the Endangered Species Act (ESA),” says Larry Voyles, Arizona Game and Fish Department director. In the department’s comment letters submitted to the Service in 2012 and 2013 (posted at www.azgfd.gov/jaguar), the department opposed this designation, based on several points including:
Arizona Game and Fish has long been involved in jaguar conservation and has been a member of the Interagency Jaguar Conservation Team since 1996. For more information on jaguars, visit www.azgfd.gov/jaguar. |
The Arizona Game and Fish Department prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, sex, national origin, age, or disability in its programs and activities. If anyone believes that they have been discriminated against in any of the AGFD’s programs or activities, including employment practices, they may file a complaint with the Deputy Director, 5000 W. Carefree Highway, Phoenix, AZ 85086-5000, (602) 942-3000, or with the Fish and Wildlife Service, 4040 N. Fairfax Dr. Ste. 130, Arlington, VA 22203. Persons with a disability may request a reasonable accommodation or this document in an alternative format by contacting the Deputy Director as listed above. |
Sunday, 9 March 2014
Arizona Game and Fish comments on recent jaguar critical habitat announcement
Labels:
Arizona Game and Fish Commission,
habitat,
jaguar
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
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!