The Fish and Wildlife Service is thumbing its nose at the Endangered Species Act and letting wolf-hating states sabotage decades of recovery efforts.
A gray wolf pup sits next to an adult wolf near a tree trunk -
photo: M L on Unsplash
A pair of conservation coalitions on Monday made good on their
threats to sue the U.S. government over its denial of federal
protections for gray wolves in the northern Rocky Mountains, where
state killing regimes "put wolves at obvious risk of extinction in
the foreseeable future."
The organizations filed notices of their plans for the lawsuits in
early February, after the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS)
determined that Endangered Species Act protections for the region's
wolves were "not warranted." The Interior Department agency could
have prevented the suits in the U.S. District Court for the District
of Montana by reversing its decision within 60 days but refused to
do so.
"The Biden administration and its Fish and Wildlife Service are
complicit in the horrific war on wolves being waged by the states of
Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana," declared George Nickas, executive
director of Wilderness Watch, one of 10 organizations represented by
the Western Environmental Law Center (WELC).
"Idaho is fighting to open airstrips all over the backcountry,
including in designated Wilderness, to get more hunters to wipe out
wolves in their most remote hideouts," Nickas noted. "Montana is
resorting to night hunting and shooting over bait and Wyoming has
simply declared an open season."
"These states are destroying wolf families in the Northern Rockies
and cruelly driving them to functional extinction via bounties,
wanton shooting, trapping, snaring, even running over them with
snowmobiles."
Brooks Fahy, executive director of Predator Defense, another WELC
group, pointed out that "these states are destroying wolf families
in the Northern Rockies and cruelly driving them to functional
extinction via bounties, wanton shooting, trapping, snaring, even
running over them with snowmobiles. They have clearly demonstrated
they are incapable of managing wolves, only of killing them."
KC York, founder and president of Trap Free Montana, also
represented by WELC, said that "Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming know
that they were let off the hook in their brutal and unethical
destruction of wolves even acknowledged as such by the service."
"They set the stage for other states to follow," York warned. "We
are already witnessing the disturbing onset of giving the fox the
key to the hen house and abandoning the farm. The maltreatment is
now destined to worsen for these wolves and other indiscriminate
species, through overt, deceptive, well-orchestrated, secretive, and
legal actions."
The other organizations in the WELC coalition are Alliance for the
Wild Rockies, Friends of the Clearwater, International Wildlife
Coexistence Network, Nimiipuu Protecting Our Environment, Protect
the Wolves, Western Watersheds Project, and WildEarth Guardians.
The second lawsuit is spearheaded by the Center for Biological
Diversity, Humane Society of the United States, Humane Society
Legislative Fund, and Sierra Club, whose leaders took aim at the
same three states for their wolf-killing schemes.
"The states of Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming act like it's 1880 with
the most radical and unethical methods to kill as many wolves as
possible in an effort to manage for bare minimum numbers," said
Sierra Club northern Rockies field organizer Nick Gevock. "This kind
of management is disgraceful, it's unnecessary, and it sets back
wolf conservation decades, and the American people are not going to
stand by and allow it to happen."
"Rather than allow states to cater to trophy hunters, trappers, and
ranchers, the agency must ensure the preservation of wolves."
Margie Robinson, staff attorney for wildlife at the Humane Society
of the United States, stressed that "under the Endangered Species
Act, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service cannot ignore crucial
scientific findings. Rather than allow states to cater to trophy
hunters, trappers, and ranchers, the agency must ensure the
preservation of wolves—who are vital to ensuring healthy
ecosystems—for generations to come."
The Center for Biological Diversity's carnivore conservation program
director, Collette Adkins, was optimistic about her coalition's
chances based on previous legal battles, saying that "we're back in
court to save the wolves and we'll win again."
"The Fish and Wildlife Service is thumbing its nose at the
Endangered Species Act and letting wolf-hating states sabotage
decades of recovery efforts," Adkins added. "It's heartbreaking and
it has to stop."