Scientific
Classification of Wolves
Gray Wolves
Red Wolves
Ethiopian
Wolves
Wolf Prey and
Predation
Depredation
(9 items)
Are
Wolves Endangered
IUCN
Manifesto on Wolf Conservation
Federal
Process of Reclassification and the Endangered Species Act

Federal Process of Reclassification and Delisting

Federal
Wildlife Service Proposal for Reclassification
 Status
of Delisting and Reclassifying Gray Wolves
 Endangered
Species Act of 1973
Frequently
Asked Questions About Wolf Management
Methods
Used for Estimating Wolf Abundance
Human Perspectives
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by Ron Refsnider
US Department of the Interior
US Fish and Wildlife Service
Updated July , 2000.
The Endangered Species Act (ESA) is intended to conserve endangered
and threatened species and their habitats and to improve the species'
status so that they no longer need ESA protection. When their recovery
has progressed to that point, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
(USFWS) takes steps to delist, or remove, the species from the federal
list of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants. If the species
had been listed as endangered, the USFWS sometimes reclassifies
it to threatened status as an intermediate step toward removal of
ESA protection. Once a species is removed from the federal list,
management authority for the species generally returns to the states
and tribes that have jurisdiction over the areas that the species
inhabits.
The ESA should be thought of as an emergency room for species;
it provides emergency temporary care to ensure the species' survival
and to pull it back from the brink of extinction. Hopefully, once
species are listed as threatened or endangered the resulting intensive
care they receive under the ESA leads to a "recovery" to the extent
that the species can be moved back to the more routine care and
management of the states and tribes. The species can be delisted
at that point. "Recovery" under the ESA doesn't mean that the species
must be back to full health - restored to its past population level
or throughout its historical range - before it can be delisted.
Rather, "recovery" under the ESA means that the species no longer
needs ESA's emergency care to keep it from becoming extinct in the
foreseeable future.
Rulemaking is the name of the formal process by which a species
is listed as endangered or threatened, and eventually reclassified
or delisted. (The same process is used for establishing special
regulations for a species or for designating critical habitat.)
The rulemaking process is designed to promote public involvement
in the decision so that it is based on the best available information
and to provide a full explanation of the decision when it is announced.
For ESA listings, reclassifications, and delistings the rulemaking
process has a minimum of four steps:
- The USFWS publishes the proposed change and the reasons for
it in the Federal Register. The proposal is also publicized in
other ways to ensure that interested individuals and organizations
are aware of it.
- A public comment period of at least 60 days provides an opportunity
for any interested party to provide data or opinions relevant
to the proposed action. If requested, the USFWS will hold one
or more public hearings. We will have a 120-day comment period
for the gray wolf proposal, and numerous hearing and informational
meetings will be held nation-wide.
- After the public comment period has closed, the USFWS reviews
all new data and comments,and reconsiders the proposed action.
Alternate actions or modifications of the proposal are also considered.
- The final decision is published in the Federal Register, announcing
the effective date of the action. In some cases the final decision
may be to withdraw the proposed action or to adopt a modified
version of it. This decision is to be published within one year
of the publication of the proposal.
The USFWS currently is operating three gray wolf recovery programs:
the northern U.S. Rockies, the Southwest ("Mexican Wolf'), and the
Western Great Lakes States (also known as the Eastern Timber Wolf
Recovery Program). The USFWS is also considering the development
of a fourth recovery program for New York and several New England
states. (USFWS also operates a separate recovery program for a related
species, the red wolf (Canis rufus), which is being reintroduced
to sites in the southeastern U.S.)
Each of the gray wolf recovery programs has its own recovery plan
which was developed by experts on the species in that part of the
country. Those plans contain recovery (that is, delisting) and reclassification
criteria that specify goals for the distribution and numbers of
wolves in each of the recovery regions. These criteria guide the
USFWS in deciding if the ESA protections can be reduced (by reclassifing
to threatened) or removed (by delisting the species).
The recovery and reclassification criteria spelled out in the
recovery plans are not the only yardsticks that must be used to
determine if federal status of the gray wolf should be changed.
The ESA identifies five factors that must be considered in any listing,
reclassification, or delisting decision:
- threats to, or actual destruction of, the habitat needed by
the species;
- threats from the over-use of the species for commercial, recreational,
scientific, or educational purposes;
- threats from disease or predation;
- the amount of protection provided to the species or its habitat
by other laws and regulations;
- any other natural or man-made factors that might affect the
continued existence of the species.
Achieving, or nearing achievement, of the recovery plan's delisting
or recovery criteria causes the USFWS to evaluate the species using
these five factors. This evaluation includes an assessment of whether
these factors are likely to increase and re-endanger the species
if it is delisted. A discussion of these five factors must be included
in any ESA proposal that is published in the Federal Register.
As additional insurance to protect species that might have been
delisted prematurely, the ESA requires that delisted species be
monitored for at least five years. If monitoring indicates that
the delisting was premature, the USFWS can relist the species, even
on an emergency basis, to protect the species under the ESA. Emergency
listings can be completed in a matter of weeks and take effect as
soon as the relisting notice appears in the Federal Register. They
provide full, but short-term, protection by the ESA while the USFWS
determines if relisting is needed.
The USFWS has published a proposal to reclassify certain gray wolf
populations from endangered to threatened, and to remove (delist)
the ESA protections across 30 states where gray wolf recovery is
not feasible or not necessary under the ESA. This proposal recognizes
that wolf recovery is proceeding at different rates for different
gray wolf populations and seeks to change the current listing to
reflect that recovery progress. It proposes that separate ESA listings
be established for four distinct population segments of the gray
wolf, and that each listing reflect the recovery already achieved
by that population.
The proposal also seeks to promote additional recovery progress
by providing special regulations that would make it easier for designated
government agents to reduce the conflicts between expanding gray
wolf populations and human activities. Such special regulations
have existed since 1978 for the threatened wolves in Minnesota and
have been instrumental in the recovery of wolves there.
Developing such a complex and national proposal is a huge undertaking.
The July proposal has been under development for two years. Thus,
it does not reflect the recent Minnesota wolf legislation that was
signed into law by Governor Ventura. The USFWS is currently consulting
with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources to gather more
information on how that legislation will be implemented and translated
into a State wolf management plan. The Eastern Timber Wolf Recovery
Team is also being asked to evaluate the impacts of the new Minnesota
statutes. When the USFWS has completed its review, it may develop
and publish a second proposal that recommends delisting gray wolves
in the Midwest. Such a proposal will be independent of the July
2000 proposal and will have a separate comment period and decision.
The people of the United States have worked long and hard to bring
the wolf back from the brink of extinction in several regions of
the country. ESA recovery for the wolves in the Western Great Lakes
area is now in sight and is probably on the horizon for the Northern
U.S. Rockies wolves. It is the proper time to begin discussions
on relaxing or removing federal protections. Hopefully, these discussions
can step back from emotions and focus on the scientific information
at hand. We may find that it's nearly time to declare success for
the recovery of the gray wolf in some areas and shift some of the
federal attention and funding to other threatened and endangered
animals and plants that are truly in need of emergency care. Or
we may conclude that such changes would be premature.
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