Press Release, Oakland, CA (For
Immediate Release, June 8, 2016
Contact: Jenny Loda, (510)
844-7136, jloda@biologicaldiversity.org)
The Center for Biological
Diversity today filed a notice
of intent to sue the U.S. Forest Service for authorizing livestock grazing on
the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest without considering the potential impacts
to federally protected Sierra
Nevada yellow-legged frogs and Yosemite
toads.
Livestock grazing and other
activities on Forest Service lands have contributed to the declines of both
amphibians. But before approving grazing on a series of allotments earlier this
year on the Humboldt-Toiyabe, the Forest Service did not consult with the Fish
and Wildlife Service to ensure that livestock grazing would not jeopardize the
survival of the protected frogs and toads, in violation of the Endangered
Species Act.
“The Forest Service shrugged off
its duty to ensure that high-elevation livestock grazing in the Sierra Nevada
doesn’t harm these rare species,” said Jenny Loda, a biologist and attorney
with the Center whose work is dedicated to protecting rare amphibians and
reptiles. “Yellow-legged frogs and Yosemite toads are already in serious
trouble. The last thing they need is more sheep coming in and fouling some of
the last habitat they have left.”
Sierra Nevada yellow-legged frogs
and Yosemite toads occur at high elevations in the Sierra Nevada Mountains,
generally ranging between 4,500 feet and 12,000 feet. Both species have
suffered severe population declines and losses throughout their ranges, leading
to Endangered Species Act protections in 2014.
Sierra Nevada yellow-legged frogs
have suffered dramatic declines in range and numbers due to habitat destruction
and degradation from activities like grazing, disease, predation by nonnative
trout, pesticides and climate change.
The musical mating
calls of Yosemite toads were once a common pleasure for visitors to the
High Sierra. But the toads have now disappeared from many areas and suffered
population losses, including in Yosemite National Park, where they were first
discovered and given their name. Yosemite toads are threatened primarily by
livestock grazing, climate change and pesticides. Both species, when abundant,
play a vital link in energy and nutrient cycling for properly functioning
meadows, ponds and adjacent forest ecosystems. According to the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, livestock grazing is a threat to both species and may also
limit their recovery.
“The fate of Sierra Nevada
yellow-legged frogs and Yosemite toads is closely linked to proper management
of the public lands they call home,” Loda said. “We must ensure that these
lands are managed to support the recovery of these endangered species and that
poor management doesn't further contribute to their demise.”
The Center for Biological Diversity
is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1 million
members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species
and wild places.
For Immediate Release, June 8,
2016
Contact: Jenny Loda, (510)
844-7136, jloda@biologicaldiversity.org
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