
Lawsuit
Challenges Salmon Protection
By JEFF BARNARD
Associated
Press
April 18, 2007
Property rights
advocates, farm groups and development interests asked a federal judge
Wednesday to lift Endangered Species Act protections from all threatened
and endangered salmon across the West, arguing that the government
failed to count fish spawned in hatcheries.
The federal government
and conservation groups countered that the Endangered Species Act
requires consideration of the best available science, which clearly
indicates that depending on fish raised in hatcheries to boost salmon
numbers will, over the long run, harm fish that spawn naturally in
rivers.
U.S. District Judge
Michael Hogan gave no indication when he might rule on the case, or how
he might rule.
Pacific Legal Foundation,
a property rights public interest law firm based in
Sacramento
,
Calif.
, brought the lawsuit on
behalf of the Building Industry Association of Washington, the Coalition
for Idaho Water, farm bureaus in
Idaho
and Washington, the California State Grange and others.
The lawsuit builds on
Hogan's 2001 ruling that NOAA Fisheries, the federal agency in charge of
restoring dwindling salmon populations, violated the Endangered Species
Act when it put wild and hatchery fish in the same group, known as an
evolutionarily significant unit, or ESU, but then protected only the
wild fish. The ruling led to lifting threatened species status for the
Oregon
coastal coho.
The plaintiffs want the
court to lift threatened and endangered species listings for all 16
protected populations of salmon in
Washington
,
Idaho
,
Oregon
and
California
.
If they win, some
restrictions on logging, irrigation and urban development could
eventually be lifted around the West.
Several salmon
populations are protected in the
Seattle
and
Portland
metropolitan areas.
Irrigation water was shut off to farms in the Klamath Basin of Oregon
and
California
in 2001 to provide enough
water for threatened coho salmon in the
Klamath River
during a drought. Many timber sales on national forests have been
blocked to protect salmon.
Restrictions on
hydroelectric dam operations in the
Columbia
Basin
would not be directly affected, because the case does not
challenge 10 populations of steelhead, which overlap many of the
protected salmon zones. Pacific Legal Foundation is challenging those
listings, too, in a separate case in U.S. District Court in
Fresno
,
Calif.
Pacific Legal Foundation
lawyer Damien M. Schiff argued that NOAA Fisheries did not follow
Hogan's 2001 ruling when it developed a new policy on hatchery fish and
reconsidered its protections for salmon, because it made no effort to
determine whether hatcheries could be relied upon as the principal means
of assuring the survival of the fish.
He added that the need to
consider the best available science stops once the hatchery and wild
fish are put into the same population group, which NOAA Fisheries did.
Paul Lall, a U.S. Justice
Department lawyer, countered that NOAA Fisheries had carefully
considered Hogan's 2001 ruling, and that under the best available
science, it had to consider more than just population numbers. It also
had to consider whether salmon could reproduce effectively, if they were
genetically diverse, and whether they were well distributed over their
geographic range.
Science showed that fish
raised in hatcheries eventually adapted to life in hatcheries, rather
than the wild, and while they could help spread geographic distribution,
they could sometimes harm genetic diversity and reproductive success,
Lall added.
Jan Hasselman,
representing Trout Unlimited, argued that the plaintiffs had not
challenged the science behind the creation of the salmon population
groups, and added that NOAA Fisheries' blue ribbon panel of scientists
had declared it was "biologically indefensible" to count
hatchery fish when deciding whether a group was in danger of extinction.
The judge's only question
for lawyers was whether various runs of salmon within the same
population group, such as spring chinook and fall chinook, could be
expected to interbreed, given the fact that they spawn in different
parts of the river and at different times of year.
The question was
apparently in reference to the plaintiffs' claim that NOAA Fisheries had
protected some salmon population groups that were too large
geographically, said Schiff.
Lall told the judge that
there was scientific evidence that over time, some different runs did
interbreed - enough to make those within a larger group genetically
similar.
He added that the
alternative to creating broad population groups, known as evolutionarily
significant units, would be to list each seasonal run of salmon in each
little stream.
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Source: http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2007/04/18/ap3627358.html
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