Personal tools
You are here: Home News Press Room Press Clips Conservation groups seek to intervene in lynx case
Document Actions
  • Email this page
  • Print this
  • Bookmark and Share

Conservation groups seek to intervene in lynx case

By K.C. Mehaffey
Wenatchee World

Wenatchee World reporter K.C. Mehaffey covers the news of conservation groups, including Conservation Northwest, filing papers in U.S. District Court in Wyoming on Monday to defend designated critical habitat for Canada lynx being challenged by snowmobile groups. "Washington's habitat — which includes parts of the Loomis State Forest and Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest — must be protected for the survival and recovery of lynx," says our international conservation director Joe Scott.

Conservation groups seek to intervene in lynx case

Lolo, a 23-pound male lynx captured on March 2, is the first in the Loomis State Forest to get one of the study's new radio collars with GPS data that can be downloaded remotely. Photo USFS

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Five conservation groups filed papers in U.S. District Court in Wyoming on Monday to defend designated critical habitat for Canada lynx being challenged by snowmobile groups.

Both the Washington and Wyoming state snowmobile associations filed the lawsuit against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in May, saying some of the 39,000 square miles of critical habitat in six states would restrict snowmobiling.

Canada lynx are listed as a threatened species, and in February, the federal government re-evaluated habitat needed to protect the animal. The new designation included 2,000 square miles in North Central Washington — the only habitat listed as critical in Washington state.

Joe Scott, spokesman for Conservation Northwest, said his group joined four others that filed to intervene in the lawsuit because Washington's habitat — which includes parts of the Loomis State Forest and Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest — must be protected for the survival and recovery of lynx.

Scott said it's surprising that the snowmobilers are challenging the critical habitat in Washington state. "Looking at the maps, it's not going to be a serious impediment to snowmobiling," he said.

In most places, he said, snowmobilers are already restricted to roads, and it's the Forest Plan, not the critical habitat designation, that could limit expansion into other parts of the forest.

Another issue that snowmobilers in Washington have raised, he said, is the habitat here is no longer critical to lynx because recent fires, particularly the Tripod Fire in 2006, have already wiped out its habitat.

"One of the ecological facts of lynx and their obligatory prey — snowshoe hare — is that they're tied to these systems that burn regularly. They are dependent on fire," he said.

The habitat is not lost to fire, only temporarily unusable because it cannot support a vigorous snowshoe hare population, he said. But the lodgepole pine forest will recover, bringing even better habitat than that which burned, Scott said.

Matt Mead, spokesman for the Washington snowmobilers' group, said environmentalists have been looking to the lynx habitat designation to do away with motorized recreation in a large area.

"They see this as a tool to get there," Mead said Monday. "We don't agree."

Along with Conservation Northwest, the other groups filing to intervene on behalf of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service include the Lands Council, Defenders of Wildlife, Center for Biological Diversity, Friends of the Wild Swan, and Jackson Hole Conservation Alliance.

Read the original story
Document Actions
powered by Plone | site by Groundwire and served with clean energy