• Biden feds draw up final plan to kill hundreds of thousands of barred o

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jul 5 23:03:39 2024
    XPost: alt.birdwatching.owls, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: sac.politics, alt.society.liberalism

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/climate-lab/feds-draw-up-final- plan-to-kill-hundreds-of-thousands-of-barred-owls-in-pnw/

    It is time, federal wildlife managers have decided, to kill invasive
    barred owls in the Pacific Northwest that threaten native spotted owls
    with extinction.

    The barred owl, ransacking forests and pushing deeper into fragile
    habitats, is outcompeting the spotted owl. It’s bigger, more aggressive,
    and eats anything in the spotted owl’s territory. Wildlife managers see no choice but to reduce the number of barred owls in some areas, to create
    refugia where spotted owls may persist.

    The control program, outlined in a final Environmental Impact Statement announced Wednesday by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, is intended to result in the annual removal of less than one-half of 1% of the current
    North American barred owl population — but it’s still a lot of birds: as
    many as 500,000 barred owls, over the next 30 years, depending on how
    fully the program is implemented.

    The policy is the result of more than 15 years of review and study and collaboration, said Bridget Moran, Oregon Fish and Wildlife Office deputy
    state supervisor.

    “We are at a crossroads. We now have the science. … There is time for us
    to act now, but that window is closing,” Moran said.

    “We are wildlife biologists, we don’t take this on lightly. We do so
    because we know the Endangered Species Act requires us to do everything possible to protect endangered species, and we are doing that.”

    Under the program, trained professionals would be deployed in about half
    of the areas where spotted owls and invasive barred owls are found in the northern spotted owl’s range, and also deployed to limit the barred owl’s invasion into California. Hunting by the general public would not be
    allowed. Shooters are to call barred owls into close range to confirm the species’ identity, and kill them with a shotgun. Lead shot will not be
    used.

    To implement the program, USFWS must first obtain a permit under the
    Migratory Bird Treaty Act. The agency could then designate interested
    tribes, federal and state agencies, or landowners to shoot the owls. The “removal specialists,” as the agency calls them, would have to meet
    training and competency requirements set by the agency and monitor and
    report results.

    The USFWS conducted a scoping and public comment process on its draft environmental impact statement last winter and will announce a final
    record of the decision in at least 30 days after the formal publication of
    the final statement in the Federal Register on Friday.

    The plan is essentially unchanged from the draft statement, which
    attracted strong responses, including more than 8,600 public comments.

    Bob Sallinger, executive director of Bird Conservation Oregon, said while
    his organization supports fighting extinction of any species and believes
    the science is there to support some removal of barred owls, the plan is “fatally flawed.

    “We think this plan will result in a tremendous number of dead barred owls
    but likely won’t save the spotted owl,” Sallinger said. “The rigor in
    terms of the training, the requirements, the oversight and accountability
    isn’t there and if just a fraction of the birds shot turn out to be
    spotted owls, the outcome would be devastating. Our recommendation was
    they really needed to go back and rethink this with something much more targeted and sustainable.”

    Hilary Franz, Washington’s commissioner of public lands, wrote Deb
    Haaland, Department of Interior secretary, last month, expressing concerns about the scope of the program — proposed on 14 million acres, it’s the largest-ever raptor-killing plan, and without precedent in any wildlife
    control program, she noted.

    Others saw no choice.

    Claire Catania, executive director of Birds Connect Seattle (formerly
    Seattle Audubon) had to take a deep breath before talking about the
    program, which the organization supports, with caveats. “This is not
    something we are celebrating. It is a necessity, and a terrible
    necessity,” Catania said. “It is so unfortunate that this is where we are
    … if there were any other paths forward for us to consider, you better
    believe we would be at the front of the line advocating for it, but it is
    just not there.”

    Catania predicted conservationists will be facing more such moments.
    “These types of scenarios are unfortunately going to be facing us more and
    more as we head deeper into the climate crises, and we are going to be
    faced with bad choices,” Catania said. “We can’t just stand up for
    endangered species when it is palatable to do so.”

    In Washington, areas the agency has mapped where barred owl removal could potentially take place include the entire Olympic National Park and
    Olympic National Forest, state lands adjacent to them, and the Yakama reservation. The soonest any large-scale implementation of the program is likely to begin is next spring.

    A generalist predator, the barred owl is not only a threat to the spotted
    owl, but to Northwest ecosystems more broadly, noted Robin Bown, barred
    owl strategy lead for the USFWS. The barred owl is a devastating new
    predator to animals naive to their threat, from salamanders in Oregon to crayfish in California, with both species at risk, Bown said.

    Much has been done to try to rescue the northern spotted owl, the poster
    animal of the campaign to save the old-growth forests of the Pacific
    Northwest. The owl was listed as a threatened species in 1990. Then, in
    1994, a federal judge approved the Northwest Forest Plan, devised under
    the Clinton administration, to set aside some 24 million acres of old-
    growth forests on federal land. The multispecies protection plan was
    intended to preserve habitat for the spotted owl on federal lands in the
    places scientists deemed most important for its survival, from Washington
    to California.

    The owl depends on old-growth forests home to its primary prey — small
    mammals that thrive in the complex, unique environment of old-growth
    forests — including flying squirrels and tree voles.

    But the owl, already greatly reduced in numbers by logging before the
    Northwest Forest Plan, faces continued habitat loss from wildfire and
    logging on unprotected lands. And now, it is mortally threatened by a
    crushing invasive competitor.

    Barred owls were first documented in British Columbia in 1959 and in Washington, Oregon and California in the 1970s. Today, there are well over 100,000 barred owls in the northern spotted owl’s territory in Washington, Oregon and Northern California, according to USFWS.

    Katherine Fitzgerald, northern spotted owl recovery lead for USFWS, said
    after watching the northern spotted owl decline for so many years, “There
    is some momentum to get them some help.

    “Absolutely we don’t see it lightly, but I am looking forward to seeing
    some efforts on the ground. I would like to see those declines slowed and reversed.”


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  • From Watson Herbusch@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 7 20:38:51 2024
    XPost: alt.birdwatching.owls, or, politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    On 05 Jul 2024, "Leroy N. Soetoro" <democrat-criminals@mail.house.gov>
    posted some news:lnsB1A6A361793246F089P2473@0.0.0.1:

    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/climate-lab/feds-draw-up-fina
    l- plan-to-kill-hundreds-of-thousands-of-barred-owls-in-pnw/

    It is time, federal wildlife managers have decided, to kill invasive
    barred owls in the Pacific Northwest that threaten native spotted owls
    with extinction.

    The barred owl, ransacking forests and pushing deeper into fragile
    habitats, is outcompeting the spotted owl. It’s bigger, more
    aggressive, and eats anything in the spotted owl’s territory. Wildlife managers see no choice but to reduce the number of barred owls in some
    areas, to create refugia where spotted owls may persist.

    Put some of those owls in San Francisco. Maybe they'll eat the drug
    addicts and homeless. Win win.

    The control program, outlined in a final Environmental Impact
    Statement announced Wednesday by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
    is intended to result in the annual removal of less than one-half of
    1% of the current North American barred owl population — but it’s
    still a lot of birds: as many as 500,000 barred owls, over the next 30
    years, depending on how fully the program is implemented.

    Heck, pay me $35 an owl carcass and I'll move out there to help shoot them buggers with a .222 or maybe an AR-15.

    The policy is the result of more than 15 years of review and study and collaboration, said Bridget Moran, Oregon Fish and Wildlife Office
    deputy state supervisor.

    “We are at a crossroads. We now have the science. … There is time for
    us to act now, but that window is closing,” Moran said.

    “We are wildlife biologists, we don’t take this on lightly. We do so
    because we know the Endangered Species Act requires us to do
    everything possible to protect endangered species, and we are doing
    that.”

    How about considering tranny annoyances as barred owls so folks can shoot
    them?

    Under the program, trained professionals would be deployed in about
    half of the areas where spotted owls and invasive barred owls are
    found in the northern spotted owl’s range, and also deployed to limit
    the barred owl’s invasion into California. Hunting by the general
    public would not be allowed. Shooters are to call barred owls into
    close range to confirm the species’ identity, and kill them with a
    shotgun. Lead shot will not be used.

    To implement the program, USFWS must first obtain a permit under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. The agency could then designate interested
    tribes, federal and state agencies, or landowners to shoot the owls.
    The “removal specialists,” as the agency calls them, would have to
    meet training and competency requirements set by the agency and
    monitor and report results.

    The USFWS conducted a scoping and public comment process on its draft environmental impact statement last winter and will announce a final
    record of the decision in at least 30 days after the formal
    publication of the final statement in the Federal Register on Friday.

    The plan is essentially unchanged from the draft statement, which
    attracted strong responses, including more than 8,600 public comments.

    Bob Sallinger, executive director of Bird Conservation Oregon, said
    while his organization supports fighting extinction of any species and believes the science is there to support some removal of barred owls,
    the plan is “fatally flawed.

    Only if you're a barred owl.

    “We think this plan will result in a tremendous number of dead barred
    owls but likely won’t save the spotted owl,” Sallinger said. “The
    rigor in terms of the training, the requirements, the oversight and accountability isn’t there and if just a fraction of the birds shot
    turn out to be spotted owls, the outcome would be devastating. Our recommendation was they really needed to go back and rethink this with something much more targeted and sustainable.”

    Hilary Franz, Washington’s commissioner of public lands, wrote Deb
    Haaland, Department of Interior secretary, last month, expressing
    concerns about the scope of the program — proposed on 14 million
    acres, it’s the largest-ever raptor-killing plan, and without
    precedent in any wildlife control program, she noted.

    Others saw no choice.

    Claire Catania, executive director of Birds Connect Seattle (formerly
    Seattle Audubon) had to take a deep breath before talking about the
    program, which the organization supports, with caveats. “This is not something we are celebrating. It is a necessity, and a terrible
    necessity,” Catania said. “It is so unfortunate that this is where we
    are … if there were any other paths forward for us to consider, you
    better believe we would be at the front of the line advocating for it,
    but it is just not there.”

    Just have Fauci infect some with bird flu or COVID and turn them loose.

    Catania predicted conservationists will be facing more such moments.
    “These types of scenarios are unfortunately going to be facing us more
    and more as we head deeper into the climate crises, and we are going
    to be faced with bad choices,” Catania said. “We can’t just stand up
    for endangered species when it is palatable to do so.”

    In Washington, areas the agency has mapped where barred owl removal
    could potentially take place include the entire Olympic National Park
    and Olympic National Forest, state lands adjacent to them, and the
    Yakama reservation. The soonest any large-scale implementation of the
    program is likely to begin is next spring.

    A generalist predator, the barred owl is not only a threat to the
    spotted owl, but to Northwest ecosystems more broadly, noted Robin
    Bown, barred owl strategy lead for the USFWS. The barred owl is a
    devastating new predator to animals naive to their threat, from
    salamanders in Oregon to crayfish in California, with both species at
    risk, Bown said.

    Much has been done to try to rescue the northern spotted owl, the
    poster animal of the campaign to save the old-growth forests of the
    Pacific Northwest. The owl was listed as a threatened species in 1990.
    Then, in 1994, a federal judge approved the Northwest Forest Plan,
    devised under the Clinton administration, to set aside some 24 million
    acres of old- growth forests on federal land. The multispecies
    protection plan was intended to preserve habitat for the spotted owl
    on federal lands in the places scientists deemed most important for
    its survival, from Washington to California.

    The owl depends on old-growth forests home to its primary prey — small mammals that thrive in the complex, unique environment of old-growth
    forests — including flying squirrels and tree voles.

    But the owl, already greatly reduced in numbers by logging before the Northwest Forest Plan, faces continued habitat loss from wildfire and
    logging on unprotected lands. And now, it is mortally threatened by a crushing invasive competitor.

    Barred owls were first documented in British Columbia in 1959 and in Washington, Oregon and California in the 1970s. Today, there are well
    over 100,000 barred owls in the northern spotted owl’s territory in Washington, Oregon and Northern California, according to USFWS.

    Katherine Fitzgerald, northern spotted owl recovery lead for USFWS,
    said after watching the northern spotted owl decline for so many
    years, “There is some momentum to get them some help.

    “Absolutely we don’t see it lightly, but I am looking forward to
    seeing some efforts on the ground. I would like to see those declines
    slowed and reversed.”

    Now that I think about it, a .17 HMR would do pretty well against those
    owls too.

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)