Saturday, July 2, 2011

EnvironMENTALists in Government Plan to Save the Spotted Owl by Killing Off Native Barred Owls




EnvironMENTALists in Government Plan to Save the Spotted Owl by Killing Off Native Barred Owls

doctorbulldog | 1 July, 2011 at 10:17 am | Categories: Environ-mental-ism | URL: http://wp.me/p1NPg-7e1

Yeah...  Isn't that just like an environMENTAList?   Euthanize the competition.

Gov't Announces New Way to Protect Spotted Owls: Kill Their Competition

July 1, 2011 by Jonathon M. Seidl - The Blaze

The northern spotted owl is a beautiful bird. It's also threatened under the Endangered Species Act. And now, the government is taking drastic measures to ensure it's survival by advocating the "removal" of the bird's major competition, while also seemingly targeting loggers.

"Removal" of the birds is really just another way to say shooting the barred owl, the spotted owl's rival. And it's part of a group of recommendations announced by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to help revitalize the spotted owl population:

Management of the encroaching barred owl to reduce harm to spotted owls. Most of the recovery actions the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has carried out since finalizing the spotted owl's 2008 recovery plan deal with the barred owl threat. A major part of this is developing a proposal for experimental removal of barred owls in certain areas to see what effect that would have on spotted owls, and then to evaluate whether or not broad scale removal should be considered. This portion of the 2008 plan was not significantly revised.

The Seattle Weekly explains how "removal" has worked in the past:

Though the USFWS policy hasn't officially been released yet, The Oregonian reports that it's likely to include a strategy to kill off between 1,200 and 1,500 barred owls from northern California through Oregon and Washington.

Killing off invasive species is a common practice in wildlife management, but barred owls aren't invasive–they're native. And several environmental groups are arguing that killing them won't help the problem unless people are prepared to shoot the owls by the thousands every single year.

One biologist estimates the cost of such a plan to be $1 million annually.

Plus, by seemingly all accounts, the barred owl is simply a stronger and better-adapted species. It eats a wider variety of food and nests in a wider variety of places than the spotted owl.

While the wisdom behind killing one species to save another is part of the debate, there's also controversy surrounding another aspect of the recommendations — protecting the spotted owl's habitat. But there's just one problem: that conflicts with local logging. Read more of this post

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