
Court
Upholds Federal Listing for
Oregon
Coast
Coho Salmon
PORTLAND
,
Oregon
,
October 9, 2007
(ENS) - A federal judge has declared
illegal the Bush administration's decision to remove endangered species
protections for
Oregon
Coast
coho
salmon.
Today,
U.S. District Judge Garr King adopted in its entirety the July 2007
recommendation of Magistrate Judge Janice Stewart that the
administration's refusal to list the coho be set aside.
The
judge ruled that coho's legal status as a Threatened species be reviewed
and a new listing decision be finalized within 60 days.
Restoration
of the Endangered Species Act listing would prohibit actions that harm
the species and require the government to prepare recovery plans.
The
decision comes in response to a lawsuit filed by fishermen and
conservation groups last year.
Historically,
more than two million coho salmon spawned in
Oregon
's coastal
rivers. Due to decades of aggressive logging and poorly managed fishing,
those numbers collapsed. Runs bottomed out at about 14,000 in 1997, a
decline of more than 99 percent from historic levels. The runs were
listed under the Endangered Species Act the following year.
Coast
coho returns showed some improvements in the early 2000s but have
generally declined since then, and still remain at a small fraction of
historic levels.
A slight
rebound between 2001 and 2003 prompted the state of
Oregon
to
prematurely declare Coast coho sufficiently recovered to be stripped of
federal protection.
The
National Marine Fisheries Service, NMFS, has twice proposed to list the
Oregon
Coast
coho
salmon as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act, but has
twice withdrawn the proposed listing at the urging of the state of
Oregon
.
Today,
of 27 salmon and steelhead populations in the
Pacific
Northwest
and
California
, the
Oregon
Coast
coho is
the only population not listed under the Endangered Species Act.
The
decision to withhold endangered species protections from the coho was
based on
Oregon
’s
viability analysis which states that "coho populations are
inherently resilient at low abundance."
In
rejecting that analysis, the court cited extensive scientific critiques
of that theory from government scientists, who said that it was
unreliable and failed to pass the "red-face test." The court
ruled that the new theory did not represent the "best available
science"as required by law.
The
federal agency charged with administering the fishery, National Marine
Fisheries Service, overruled its own scientists who raised grave doubts
about
Oregon
's novel
population analysis as well as the status of the species. The
Oregon
coho lost
their federal endangered species protection in 2006.
"This
is a victory for good science and for
Oregon
's
future," said Earthjustice attorney Patti Goldman, who argued the
case for the groups. "Restoring protections for these salmon today
means a greener and economically vibrant
Oregon
tomorrow."
"
Oregon
coast coho
are still on life support, and recovery depends on protecting and
restoring the rivers and streams these fish depend on," said Dr.
Chris Frissell, former
Oregon
State
University
salmon
biologist and senior staff scientist with Pacific Rivers Council, one of
the plaintiff groups. "This decision restores vital habitat
protection so that the coho can begin moving toward recovery."
The
plaintiffs include the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen's
Associations, Institute for Fisheries Resources, Pacific Rivers Council,
Trout Unlimited, Oregon Wild, Native Fish Society, and Umpqua
Watersheds.
Once a
staple of
Oregon
's salmon
fishing fleet but now off-limits to commercial fishermen, coastal coho
runs have sharply declined from their historic abundance. "For the
sake of our fishing families and communities, now is not the time to
slack off on habitat protections for coho salmon," said Glen Spain,
with the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen's Associations.
"Eliminating
these protections shifted the conservation burden onto the backs of
fishermen, without protecting the rivers and streams the coho depend on.
With federal habitat protections restored, coho have a chance to recover
and, one day, draconian fishing restrictions can be lifted," said
Spain
.
Coast
Range Association Director Chuck Willer said, "Let's put the legal
issues behind us and get on with the work of restoring coastal
freshwater habitat and returning the coho to abundance."
Copyright
Environment News Service (ENS) 2007. All rights reserved.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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Source:
http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/oct2007/2007-10-09-091.asp
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