For Immediate Release, January 13, 2020, Brian Segee
SILVER CITY, N.M.— The Center for Biological Diversity sued the Trump administration today for failing to prevent livestock from damaging southwestern rivers and streams.
The
waterways are home to numerous endangered and threatened species:
southwestern willow flycatchers, yellow-billed cuckoos, Gila chub, loach
minnow and spikedace fish, Chiricahua leopard frogs, and narrow-headed
and northern Mexican garter snakes.
Today’s
lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Tucson, says the U.S. Forest
Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are violating the Endangered
Species Act by allowing cows to trample rivers and streams on more than
30 grazing allotments in the upper Gila River watershed on Arizona’s
Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest and the Gila National Forest in New
Mexico.
Recent
surveys by the Center found severe cattle damage on all major waterways
in both national forests, resulting in widespread degradation of
streamside forest habitat and water quality, and imperiling several rare
species.
“It
shouldn’t take a lawsuit to keep livestock from trampling these fragile
southwestern rivers, but the Forest Service has turned a blind eye,”
said Brian Segee, an attorney at the Center. “We found cows, manure and
flattened streambanks along nearly every mile of the waterways we
surveyed. We hope this case will get cattle off these streams and renew
the agency’s commitment to protecting endangered wildlife and our
spectacular public lands.”
The
rivers covered by the suit include the Gila, San Francisco, Tularosa
and Blue rivers. In a historic 1998 legal settlement with the Center,
the Forest Service agreed to prohibit domestic livestock grazing from
hundreds of miles of southwestern streamside habitats while it conducted
a long-overdue consultation with the Fish and Wildlife Service on the
impacts of grazing on threatened and endangered species.
That
effort and subsequent consultations have repeatedly confirmed that
livestock grazing in arid southwestern landscapes destroys riparian
habitat and imperils native fish, birds and other animals dependent on
that habitat.
Poorly
managed livestock grazing, persistent drought, dewatering, global
warming and invasive species have taken an increasing toll on
southwestern rivers. This has resulted in the recent federal protection
of several additional threatened or endangered species that depend on
southwestern riparian areas, including two species of garter snake, the
cuckoo and the leopard frog.
These impacts, as well as the looming threat of a major diversion project, led American Rivers to name the Gila the nation’s most endangered river in 2019.
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