Sabtu, 18 April 2015
critical habitat on the way maybe
That said, its still unclear whether any habitat will be designated.
"The difficulty is that the ocean per se is not the habitat, the sea ice on the ocean is the habitat," FWS spokesman Bruce Woods told me last month. And the sea ice is constantly moving.
Conservation folks, meanwhile, say it would be a complete violation of the law not to designate any habitat.
The designation of critical habitat steps up protection for the animal by barring activities that would jeopardize the habitat (and not just the species), and by extending Sec. 7 consultation requirements "from the critter to the critical habitat," as Woods put it. Federal agencies would be barred from doing anything, such as permitting oil and gas exploration, in a designated area if the action would result in "destruction or adverse modification" of the critical habitat.
"It could have a pretty big impact," an attorney for CBD told me last month.
But the Interior Secretary also has some discretion in designating habitat. Critical habitat is defined as areas within the species range "on which are found those physical or biological features (I) essential to the conservation of the species and (II) which may require special management considerations or protection." (The Secretary can also designate some areas outside the species range if those are found "essential for the conservation of the species.")
Unlike with the listing itself, the Secretary can -- and must -- consider economic impacts of designating critical habitat. "The Secretary shall designate critical habitat . . . on the basis of the best scientific data available and after taking into consideration the economic impact, and any other relevant impact, of specifying any particular area as critical habitat." The Secretary is only required to designate a certain area if he determines, based on the best science available, that failure to do so "will result in the extinction of the species."
The other part of the settlement forces the feds to come up with guidelines for the non-lethal deterrence of bears that pose a threat to public safety.
The conservation groups are still seeking to have the bear listed as endangered rather than threatened and to overturn the special rule issued along with the listing.
For what its worth, the settlement is technically a victory for the conservation groups. Under the agreement, the feds acknowledge the plaintiffs (the three enviro groups) are the "prevailing parties" regarding the two issues and agree to pay for plaintiffs legal costs.
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