JANET McCONNAUGHEY, Associated
Press 7/12/17
NEW ORLEANS - A Libertarian
organization is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a declaration that
Louisiana timberland is critical habitat for an endangered frog found only in
Mississippi.
The nonprofit Pacific Legal
Foundation wants the high court to overturn lower court rulings that have
upheld the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The agency says a network of ponds
so shallow they dry up in the summer makes the 1,500-acre tract the only
potential breeding ground outside Mississippi for dusky gopher frogs.
The declaration is an
“unprecedented abuse of the Endangered Species Act,” since the frogs haven’t
lived in Louisiana since 1965, foundation attorney Reed Hopper, who represents
landowner Markle Interests LLC, said in a news release.
“Regulators are seeking to impose
control over privately owned property in the name of a phantom frog — a frog
that is nowhere to be found on the property or, indeed, anywhere in the state.
Moreover, the property is not suitable for frog habitat,” and the owners will
not make it suitable, Hopper said.
Designating land as critical
habitat requires consultation with the agency before federal permits or
contracts are issued but doesn’t give the government any power to make
landowners do anything to protect the frog.
“I wish the landowners would stop
their wasteful and pointless challenges to the frog’s protections and instead
cooperate with habitat restoration and frog reintroduction,” Collette Adkins,
senior attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity , said in an email.
No appeals court has ever ruled
that the federal agency violated the Constitution when implementing the Endangered
Species Act, she wrote.
The critical habitat declaration
was upheld in district court and 2-1 in the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals,
which voted 8-6 against having the full court re-hear the case.
The 31/2-inch-long frogs cover
their eyes with their forefeet when picked up, and have bumps on their backs
which secrete a bitter fluid.
They once lived in Louisiana,
Mississippi and Alabama. Now an estimated 135 live in the wild and about 550
are in zoos, according to the most recent recovery plan for the frogs.
The frogs live underground, in
stump holes and burrows dug by other animals, emerging mainly to breed and lay
their eggs in “ephemeral ponds.” Because they dry up in summer, those ponds
don’t hold fish that might otherwise eat the eggs.
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