ContactsNicholas
Throckmorton, 202-208-5636
Fish and
Wildlife Service announces management changes designed to protect eagles
upon delisting
The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service announced today that the bald eagle will continue
to be strongly protected by federal law
under a
series of actions designed to govern management of eagles should
they be removed from Endangered Species Act protection.
The Service
finalized modifications to a regulatory definition under the Bald and
Golden Eagle Protection Act, the primary
federal law
that will
be used to manage eagles if they are removed from the Federal
List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants. Also
announced today are
a set of National
Bald Eagle Management Guidelines giving landowners and
others guidance
on how to ensure that actions they take on their property
are consistent with the Eagle Act and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act,
which both
protect bald eagles by prohibiting killing, selling or
otherwise harming eagles,
their nests or eggs. In addition, the Service opened a
public comment period on a proposal to establish a permit program
under
the Eagle
Act that would
allow a limited take of bald and golden eagles while ensuring
that populations are not significantly affected.
“
The bald eagle has rebounded from the brink of extinction to reach population
levels that have not been seen since World War II. This
success is the result of a lot of hard work on the part of federal
and state agencies,
conservation organizations and individuals across the
nation,” said
Service Director H. Dale Hall. “Our overriding
concern has been to ensure that bald eagles continue
to thrive once they
no longer need the
protection of the Endangered Species Act and the actions
we take will meet that goal.”
The modifications
to implementing regulations for the Eagle Act establish
a regulatory definition of “disturb,” a
term specifically prohibited as “take” by
the Eagle Act. The final definition defines “disturb” as “to
agitate or bother a bald or golden eagle to a degree
that causes, or is likely to cause, based on the best
scientific information available, 1)
injury to an eagle, 2) a decrease in its productivity,
by substantially interfering with normal breeding,
feeding, or sheltering behavior, or 3)
nest abandonment, by substantially interfering with
normal breeding, feeding, or sheltering behavior.” This
definition will provide clarity to the public while
continuing protection for bald eagles, which
will help
ensure an almost seamless transition from ESA protection
to that under the Eagle Act.
The National
Bald Eagle Management Guidelines published today provide a roadmap
for landowners and others seeking
to protect
eagles.
The guidelines are intended to help landowners and
others avoid violating
the Eagle
Act
by disturbing bald eagles. For example, the guidelines
recommend buffers around nests to screen nesting
eagles from noise
and visual distractions
caused by human activities.
The Service
also opened a 90-day public comment period on its proposal to create
a permit that
would authorize
a limited “take” of
bald and golden eagles. This proposed permit is
intended to be similar to an “incidental
take permit” issued
under the Endangered Species Act. It allows permittees
agreeing to specific conservation
measures to avoid liability if an eagle is unintentionally
harmed in the course
of an otherwise lawful activity. In addition, the
proposed permit would establish provisions to remove
eagle nests in rare cases
where their location
poses a risk to human safety or to the eagles themselves,
for example, in close proximity to an airport runway.
Such a permit
program would be
designed to ensure that any take occurs within
limits that would not affect population levels.
The
bald eagle once ranged throughout every state
except Hawaii. By 1963, only 417 nesting pairs
were found
in the lower 48. Since
the
delisting
proposal in 1999, recovery of the bald eagle
has continued to progress at an impressive rate. In
2000, a national
bald eagle
census resulted
in an estimate of 6,471 nesting pairs of bald
eagles. Today this number has
risen to 9,789 nesting pairs, due to cooperative
recovery efforts by the Service, other federal
agencies, tribes,
state and local
governments, conservation
organizations, universities, corporations and
thousands of individual Americans.
The bald
eagle first gained federal protection in 1940 when Congress passed the
Bald Eagle Protection
Act.
It was later
amended to
include golden eagles
and renamed the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection
Act. The eagle was later given protection under
the
Migratory
Bird
Treaty Act
as well.
The original
Eagle Act established protection for the bald
eagle and raised public awareness. Soon after
enactment,
populations
stabilized
or increased
in most areas
of the country. However, the eagle population
fell into steep decline in later decades, due
primarily
to widespread
use
of the pesticide
DDT, which
accumulated in eagles and caused them to lay
eggs with weakened shells. Concerns about the
bald eagle
resulted
in its protection
in 1967
under the predecessor to the current Endangered
Species Act. The eagle was
one of the original species protected by the
ESA when it was enacted in 1973.
The legal
protections given the species, along with a crucial decision
by the Environmental
Protection Agency
to ban
the use of DDT in
1972, provided the springboard for the Service
and
its partners to accelerate
recovery
through captive breeding programs, reintroductions,
law enforcement efforts, protection of habitat
around nest
sites and land
purchase and preservation
activities, leading to the robust population
levels seen today.
The Service
reclassified the eagle from endangered to threatened in 1995 in recognition
of these
improvements and later
proposed to remove
the
bald eagle from the list of threatened
and endangered species. Under the terms
of a settlement agreement, the Service
has agreed to make a final decision on its delisting
proposal
by
June
29,
2007.
Comments on the proposed managed take permit
must be received by September 4, 2007.
Comments may
be sent
by mail to the
Division of Migratory
Bird Management, Attn: RIN 1018-AV11, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service,
4401
N. Fairfax Drive, MBSP-4107, Arlington,
Virginia 22203. Comments may also
be transmitted electronically to <EaglePermitRegulation@fws.gov>,
or by following the instructions at the
Federal eRulemaking Portal: <http://www.regulations.gov>.
All comments should refer to RIN 1018-AV11.
More
information about the bald eagle and
today’s
announcement is available on the Service’s
bald eagle website at http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/baldeagle.htm.
The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service is the principal federal agency responsible
for
conserving,
protecting and enhancing
fish, wildlife
and plants and
their habitats for the continuing benefit
of the American people. The Service
manages
the
96-million-acre
National
Wildlife Refuge
System,
which encompasses
545 national wildlife refuges, thousands
of small wetlands and other special
management areas.
It also operates
69 national fish hatcheries,
64 fishery
resources offices and 81 ecological
services field stations. The agency enforces federal
wildlife laws, administers
the Endangered
Species
Act, manages migratory bird populations,
restores
nationally significant
fisheries,
conserves and restores wildlife habitat
such as
wetlands, and helps foreign and Native
American tribal governments
with their
conservation
efforts.
It also oversees the Federal Assistance
program, which distributes hundreds
of millions of
dollars in excise
taxes on fishing
and hunting equipment
to state fish and wildlife agencies.
-FWS-
|