Save Endangered Species From Environmental Regulations
A legal fight over the Arctic grayling shows how regs can hurt rather than help.

For nearly two decades, ranchers in Montana's Big Hole Valley have worked with local conservation groups to protect habitat for the Arctic grayling, a rare fish with colorful markings and a saillike dorsal fin. But if some environmentalists get their way, these voluntary efforts could be in jeopardy.
Last week, the Center for Biological Diversity and Western Watersheds Project sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service seeking federal protections for the grayling, which could result in costly land-use restrictions on ranchers in the valley. In 2020, the federal agency determined that the fish did not warrant listing under the Endangered Species Act, citing the success of voluntary conservation measures. But the environmental groups—neither of which is involved in local grayling recovery projects—contend that "regulatory mechanisms," not voluntary efforts, are needed to protect the grayling.
Unfortunately, the lawsuit not only undermines decades of good-faith compromises, it is also likely to hurt, rather than help, the fish species.
Arctic grayling once inhabited much of the upper Missouri River basin, but the remaining river-dwelling populations are now almost exclusively found in Montana's Big Hole Valley. In addition to supporting grayling and other prized fish species, the valley is home to several small agricultural communities and family-run cattle ranches. Ninety percent of the land along the river is owned by these private landowners, making them a crucial partner in efforts to recover the grayling.
In the 1990s, low river flows due to drought and irrigation diversions threatened the Big Hole's grayling population. In response, some environmentalists began filing petitions and lawsuits to list the grayling under the Endangered Species Act. But this did more harm than good. Because an endangered species listing usually comes with burdensome land-use restrictions, landowners are often reluctant to aid in recovery efforts for fear of being held responsible for harming a listed species.
Montana rancher Dave Cameron learned this lesson the hard way. Several decades ago, he sought to restore the species to a stream on his property but was discouraged when he learned about the potential federal listing. "People knowledgeable about the heavy-handed approach of the feds counseled me to forget the experiment," he told a congressional committee in 1995. Other ranchers encountered the same problem, Cameron said. "Why does the hosting of a rare and troubled creature have to be a threat to their livelihood rather than a source of pride and pleasure?"
Recognizing this challenge, local conservation groups worked with ranchers in the Big Hole Valley to develop a creative solution in 2006. The plan, known as a Candidate Conservation Agreement With Assurances, enabled landowners to restore grayling habitat in exchange for protection against future regulatory restrictions. Ranchers who enhance streamflows, restore habitat, fence off riparian areas from livestock grazing, or take other conservation actions won't be prosecuted if they inadvertently harm grayling. In addition, ranchers agree to cut back on irrigation when river levels run low, helping to boost streamflows when grayling need it most.
The agreement worked well. The grayling population in the Big Hole River has increased 172 percent since the early 2000s, and the number of breeding adult fish has more than doubled. Today, 32 landowners are enrolled in the agreement, with property-specific plans to benefit grayling across more than 160,000 acres of land along the Big Hole River.
Given this success, local conservationists are wary of the environmental lawsuit and a potential federal listing. A former director of Trout Unlimited in Montana recently told the Missoula Current that although the grayling is eligible for listing, it would only create "a lot of heartburn and a bunch of pissed off people." A member of the local watershed group agreed, saying, "If the federal government takes over, you will lose all the voluntary conservation that we have."
Similar concerns have plagued species recovery on private lands across the country. The threat of endangered species regulation has encouraged landowners to destroy potential habitat for red-cockaded woodpeckers, pygmy owls, golden-cheeked warblers, and many other species—all to avoid restrictions that could arise if the species inhabited the land. "The incentives are wrong here," a former Fish and Wildlife Service director once lamented. "If I have a rare metal on my property, its value goes up. But if a rare bird occupies the land, its value disappears." With incentives like this, it's no wonder only 2 percent of listed species have recovered in the nearly 50 years since the Endangered Species Act was passed.
Fortunately, changes may be coming. This week, the Fish and Wildlife Service announced plans to encourage more local conservation efforts similar to the one that has helped the grayling. The proposal seeks to simplify the approval process for Candidate Conservation Agreements With Assurances and other voluntary agreements, which can alleviate the Endangered Species Act's perverse incentives, but often take more than a decade to complete. (Perhaps unsurprisingly, the environmentalists behind last week's grayling lawsuit condemned the new proposal.)
As we approach the 50th anniversary of the Endangered Species Act later this year, it's worth asking how the act can be reformed to better accomplish its primary goal: to recover species. After all, endangered species have it bad enough. We should make sure the laws designed to protect them don't make things worse.
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Maybe those environmentalists should be protesting the taxpayer funded wind turbines that ostensibly kill thousands of eagles each year. I say ostensibly because I recall the government had refused to release actual numbers to the public.
They'll release the numbers when they are high enough to blame on climate change.
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Quite a few, as it turns out.
https://www.cfact.org/2020/10/23/wind-turbines-take-a-terrible-toll-on-birds/
According to experts, Wind turbines pose a significant risk to birds, especially to large raptors, birds of prey, and other migratory soaring birds. Even in a very high quality habitat, Wind turbines cause disproportionate increases in collision mortality. Besides direct injury and deaths, Wind farm turbines also cause functional habitat loss for migratory soaring birds, leading to significant damage to flocks.
In the U.S., the government is well aware of the Wind turbine potential to kill birds in large numbers. So much so that Wind operators have been allotted bird-kill quotas which indicate the number of birds that the wind operator is allowed to kill in a year.
A recent study on offshore wind farms (those in sea) revealed that 1. Wind farms act as visual stimulus, that may or may not result in an avoidance response, 2. Could result in physical habitat loss/modification or gain, and 3. Causes collision mortality.
The study concluded, “individual wind farms may have minor effects on the environment, but collectively, many of these developments, especially spread out to confront individuals from a migratory avian population along the entire length of its migration corridor may have a significant effect. This effect may be far greater than the sum of the individual parts acting alone, especially if contributing adversely to the fitness of many individuals.”
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/wind-turbines-killing-alarming-number-of-bats-scientists/2789355/
Scientists say the spinning blades are killing an alarming number of bats that are needed to help farmers kill off crop-eating insects.
The specific species of bats – hoary bats – are helpful because they love to eat nocturnal insects, according to Dr. Winifred Frick, chief scientist at Bat Conservation International.
"Quite a few, as it turns out."
Those are rookie numbers, to quote Mathew Mcconaughey on hearing that Leonardo DiCaprio only masturbates 3 or 4 times a week. Cats now kill some 1.3 billion birds each year in the US alone.
"Maybe those environmentalists should be protesting the taxpayer funded wind turbines that ostensibly kill thousands of eagles each year."
They don't just kill eagles, but any flying creature, bird and mammal alike. But protesting 'taxpayer funded' windmills is wrong headed. Those blades kill regardless how they are funded. It probably makes more sense to fund research into solid state windmills, with essentially have no moving parts and operate something like a speaker in reverse, converting vibrations into electricity. Protestors also should focus on research into electric vehicles, as the poisonous gases from internal combustion engines kill and harm many more creatures, including humans as well as eagles and other birds, which for all their apparent differences to us, have remarkably similar respiratory systems.
"...Protestors also should focus on research into electric vehicles, as the poisonous gases from internal combustion engines kill and harm many more creatures, including humans as well as eagles and other birds, which for all their apparent differences to us, have remarkably similar respiratory systems..."
Cite missing; no surprise.
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How about them California smelt which were supposed to be protected but have disappeared? I don't know the details, don't care, but it is always fun to tweak the noses of officious burrocrats whose plans backfire.
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To paraphrase Barry Goldwater, I would remind you that extinction of a species is a key component of Darwin's theory of evolution.
#defundEPA
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Hey, it's a great deal for the "environmentalists". They get to feel virtuous, without actually paying for their grandiose projects. Heavy-handed enforcement just encourages the three S's: shoot, shovel, shut up.
Sounds like a good strategy for the environmentalists themselves. They can help encourage the growth of endangered species of bacteria and worms.
"...As we approach the 50th anniversary of the Endangered Species Act later this year, it's worth asking how the act can be reformed to better accomplish its primary goal: to recover species..."
No, it isn't. It's time to examine the base assumptions of the Act:
Who decides which species get taxpayer money or water humans might put to good use and why?
Is there an optimum number of species? Just the ones currently extant?
Do any of these idiots understand that extinction is and has been a continuing process throughout the history of life on this planet?
Before you demand sacrifices from me, prove your claim with evidence.
Or STFU.
"laws designed to protect them"
[Insert clip of Archimedes the Owl cracking up; linked below]
https://youtu.be/hNW8i0bnZRU
This commentariat deserves a Heartland Institute grant to address its next International Climate Conference at Disney World
Exactly how does a local agreement between ranchers and environmental groups stop the Feds from stepping in and taking over? They don't. It has been known for decades that windmills along the west coast were decimating migrating populations of bats, eagles etc and was so bad those windfarms had to get an exemption from the Migratory Species Act and from DC to hold them blameless for killing Bald Eagles.
As for endangered species, I had the fun as a budding wildlife biologist to be in the middle of the Spotted Owl and Northern Goshawk hysteria. I did surveys of habitats for these species and I can tell you that locals and loggers went out of their way to cut down trees where they nested to avoid the Feds taking over the land and livelihoods although the Environmental Nuts along with the Feds destroyed the local logging industries. It was not a good time for anyone.
BTW: The Grayling is alive and well in other habitats and is not endangered at all. So the range is diminished from it's historical amount, big deal. Happens all of the time.
Really glad to see Reason cover this. When I was in college, I took an environmental economics class. It wasn't the pozzed kind that you might imagine though. For one of the debates, I had to argue against quotas for endangered species. I'm pretty good at playing devil's advocate, but my initial reaction was that there was no way I could argue that position. After all, it defies the common narrative. Why would rules requiring a certain population level be attained work against it?
One of the first papers I found was the one you cited above about the red-cockaded woodpecker. I couldn't believe what I was reading, but it made sense to me at that point. Govt interference in markets always creates deadweight loss. Quotas don't function any differently just because we don't buy and sell endangered species. Everyone focuses on the desired outcome (we will reach X population level) and not the means by which govt intends to reach it.
I didn't save a link to it but if you're curious about the subject, read about the white rhino throughout continental Africa. Some countries have employed trophy hunting programs. Hunters pay for the right to hunt and the proceeds work to protect and grow the population from poachers. Turns out that hunters want sustainable animal populations so that they can hunt in perpetuity. Who would have thought!
Unsurprisingly, I won that debate.