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Last updated on May 30, 2012 at 18:36 EDT

Groups Sue for Salamander Protection

August 24, 2005
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GRANTS PASS, Ore. – Conservation groups sued the government Tuesday for failing to respond to their petitions to protect two species of salamander from southwestern Oregon and Northern California under the Endangered Species Act.

The lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Portland claims the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service violated the Endangered Species Act by missing 90-day and 12-month deadlines to respond to petitions to list the Siskiyou Mountains and Scott Bar salamanders as threatened or endangered species.

It seeks a court order for Fish and Wildlife to make a preliminary finding within 30 days.

The Scott Bar salamander was recognized as a new species last May.

Noah Greenwald, a biologist with the Center for Biological Diversity, said the Bush administration has not listed any species as threatened or endangered except when ordered to by a federal judge.

He said the Siskiyou Mountains salamander was one of the hundreds of rare species protected from habitat loss from logging under the Northwest Forest Plan until the Bush administration replaced the regulation with a less restrictive test.

A federal judge recently ruled the change was made illegally, without regard to the effect on plants and animals.

“One of the reasons why (the salamander) needs Endangered Species Act protection is that the Bush administration is weakening other forest protections,” Greenwald said.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife spokeswoman Joan Jewett said the agency told the petitioners in a July 19 letter that it did not have the resources to evaluate another species for threatened or endangered status. There are currently 286 species that are candidates for listing.

“We’re stuck in that situation where we have a lot of court- ordered critical habitats and a backlog of listing petitions,” Jewett said from Portland. “We have been getting small increases in our budget the last few years, but it is still not enough to enable us to catch up.”