Hays Post, Kansas, 2/23/18
Pratt, KS – The Kansas Department
of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT) is conducting a five-year review of the
lists of Kansas species that are endangered, threatened or Species In Need of
Conservation (SINC). Endangered is the most imperiled category of the three, and
species on the SINC list are deemed to require conservation measures to prevent
them from becoming threatened or endangered. A five-year review is required by
the Kansas Nongame and Endangered Species Conservation Act of 1975. Any
individual or group can petition KDWPT to propose an addition, deletion, or
modification to the current lists by providing pertinent scientific information
required within the petition form.
KDWPT relies on the Threatened
and Endangered Species Task Committee to assist with the review process. The
task committee consists of seven members representing various disciplines, and
include staff from state and federal agencies and state universities. To
determine if a full review is warranted, the task committee examines updated
scientific information and research for any species petitioned for a listing
change. Species experts are consulted and all available data is evaluated
during the full review. These recommendations, and any amendments to them, are
published in the Kansas Register for public comment for at least 90 days. After
a full review is completed, the task committee makes recommendations to the
KDWPT Secretary and any changes to the lists must be approved by the KDWPT
Commission following a public hearing.
At the last five-year review
completed in 2014, the redbelly snake, smooth earth snake, longnose snake,
spring peeper, chestnut lamprey and silverband shiner were downlisted or
removed from the threatened list and added to the SINC list. The Eskimo curlew,
black-capped vireo, and many-ribbed salamander were removed from the threatened
list due to no evidence of viable populations in Kansas. The northern
long-eared bat was added to the SINC list.
Currently, the state endangered
list includes 10 invertebrates, five fish, two amphibians, two birds and two
mammals. The state threatened list includes six invertebrates, 11 fish, six
amphibians, four reptiles, two birds and one mammal. The state SINC list
includes 83 species. For detailed information on each list, visit www.ksoutdoors.com and
click “Wildlife & Nature,” then “Threatened and Endangered Species.”
A recent survey conducted by
Responsive Management – an internationally recognized research firm
specializing in natural resource and outdoor recreation issues – found that
conservation of threatened and endangered wildlife remains important among
Kansans. Some interesting findings included:
• A majority of Kansas residents (91
percent) agreed that the KDWPT should continue to identify and protect habitat critical
to threatened and endangered species.
• A majority (73 percent) of residents
agree with the statement, “Wildlife that is threatened and endangered in Kansas
yet abundant in other states should still be protected in Kansas.”
Petitions must be received
by May 31, 2018 to be considered for the current five-year review.
Petition forms can be downloaded at
http://ksoutdoors.com/Services/Threatened-and-Endangered-Wildlife/Five-Year-Review-of-Listed-Species and
submitted electronically to rare.species@ks.gov or
mailed to KDWPT, Attn: ESS, 512 SE
25th Ave., Pratt, KS 67124-8174.
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