Press
Release, December 11, 2019
SACRAMENTO—
The California Fish and Game Commission today approved California Endangered
Species Act protections for five of six populations of the foothill
yellow-legged frog, a species that has disappeared from more than 50% of its
historic habitat in the state. The decision responds to a 2016 petition by the
Center for Biological Diversity.
“This
is really good news for these iconic but highly imperiled stream-dwelling
frogs,” said Jeff Miller, a senior conservation advocate with the Center.
“Protecting them will also help safeguard beautiful coastal and Sierra foothill
streams which we all rely on for clean drinking water and recreation.”
The
commission today unanimously voted to protect Southern Sierra, Central Coast
and South Coast populations of the frog as endangered; and the Northern Sierra
and Feather River populations as threatened. The California Department of Fish
and Wildlife determined that foothill yellow-legged frogs in California’s North
Coast do not currently warrant protection.
Foothill
yellow-legged frogs were once found in streams and rivers along the lower
western slopes of the Sierra Nevada as well as in Pacific Coast drainages from
the Oregon border to at least as far south as Los Angeles County. This species
has now disappeared from more than half of its former California range.
Foothill
yellow-legged frogs are impacted by a wide range of threats, including dams,
water diversions, logging, mining, livestock grazing, climate change,
pesticides, off-road vehicles, disease, urban and agricultural expansion and
marijuana cultivation.
Background
Adult
foothill yellow-legged frogs (Rana boylii) are from 1.5 to 3 inches
long, with a distinctive lemon-yellow color under their legs. They inhabit
partially shaded, rocky perennial streams, and their life cycle is synchronized
with the seasonal timing of streamflow conditions. These frogs need perennial
water where they can forage through the summer and fall months.
The
Northern Sierra population ranges from the Middle Fork American River in El
Dorado County, north through the Sierra foothills to the upper Yuba River
watershed in Plumas County. The Southern Sierra population ranges from the
South Fork American River watershed, south through the Sierra foothills to the
Tehachapi Mountains. The genetically unique Feather River population is
primarily in Plumas and Butte counties.
At
least half the known historical frog populations have been lost in every
northern and central Sierra county except Plumas County. Healthy frog
populations remain in the northern and central Sierras in the American, Clavey,
Cosumnes, Feather, Merced, Mokelumne, Stanislaus, Tuolumne and Yuba rivers.
The
Central Coast population lives south of San Francisco Bay in the Coast Ranges
to San Benito and Monterey counties. Significant foothill yellow-legged frog
populations remain in the Diablo Range. The South Coast population is west of
the Salinas Valley in Monterey County and south into the southern Coast Ranges.
These frogs have now disappeared from all coastal streams south of San Luis
Obispo County.
The
Center petitioned in 2012 to protect the foothill yellow-legged frog under the
federal Endangered Species Act. Under a lawsuit settlement agreement with the
Center, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will decide by 2020 on whether the
species warrants federal protection.
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