By MIKE GARRITY AND
ERIK MOLVAR
Guest columnists
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued a ruling on July 8 on the litigation over the 2018 delisting of the Yellowstone grizzly bear population under the Endangered Species Act, affirming a District Court order that blocked the delisting of the great bears and kept them listed as a “threatened species” under the Endangered Species Act. The ruling keeps grizzly bears under federal management, and blocks sport hunting of the bears in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming.
This is a major victory for the embattled Yellowstone grizzly bear population, and a big win for science. The court clearly recognized that the Fish and Wildlife Service was bowing to political
pressure from the states in stripping grizzlies of their ESA protections, while ignoring the very clear scientific evidence that this bear population is too small and too isolated to be assured of long-term survival.
The circuit court ruled that because there were no concrete, enforceable mechanisms in place to ensure long-term genetic health of the Yellowstone grizzly, the district court correctly concluded that the 2017 Rule was arbitrary and capricious in that regard. The circuit court also affirmed that FWS’s decision to drop the commitment to recalibration in the conservation strategy violated the ESA because it was the result of political pressure by the states rather than having been based on the best scientific and commercial data.
The Ninth Circuit’s ruling is very important because the Yellowstone grizzly bear population is expanding but not growing. The population has not been growing for the last 20 years. Grizzlies are expanding because their food sources are declining, whitebark pine trees and Yellowstone cutthroat trout populations have been decimated. Yellowstone grizzlies have been moving out of their core habitat into their former habitat, in a desperate search for food.
Montana, Idaho and Wyoming are desperate to start shooting grizzly bears, which still need to be protected because they will not be recovered until we have one connected population. The current situation of isolated populations will lead to inbreeding. Once a population is inbred, it is finished. We are thrilled that the Ninth Circuit ruled that the Endangered Species Act requires that species be managed based on science, not politics.
The plaintiff group of Alliance for the Wild Rockies, Western Watersheds Project, and Native Ecosystems Council was one of five conservation and tribal plaintiff groups (plus one individual) who
sued to reverse the delisting of the Yellowstone grizzly bear population, winning a district court victory in 2018. They were opposed the states of Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and federal
governments and trophy hunting groups including the National Rifle Association and Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, seeking to strip grizzlies of protection.
Mike Garrity is the executive director of Alliance for the Wild Rockies; Erik Molvar is a wildlife biologist and executive director of Western Watersheds Project.
Bozeman Daily Chronicle Guest Editorial 7/15/20