The Endangered Species Act at 40

PeterAlagonawebAsso­ciate Pro­fes­sor Peter Alag­ona of UCSC. One of Alagona’s projects includes chron­i­cling the his­tory of the NRS. Image credit: The Sheet News

The U.S. Endan­gered Species Act (ESA) turned 40 this year. It’s a law that has been both lauded for sav­ing species and exco­ri­ated for lim­it­ing devel­op­ment since the first day of its pas­sage. UC Santa Bar­bara Pro­fes­sor of His­tory and the Envi­ron­ment Peter Alag­ona dis­cussed the mixed legacy of the ESA at the Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Lab­o­ra­tory Lec­ture Series May 21.

The fol­low­ing is an excerpt from an arti­cle by Katie Vane pub­lished in The Sheet News of Mam­moth Lakes on May 17, 2013:

Dr. Alag­ona opened the lec­ture with a ques­tion to the audi­ence: “who’s heard of envi­ron­men­tal his­tory?” he asked. By the crick­ets in the room, he had his answer. Dr. Alag­ona explained that his field, envi­ron­men­tal his­tory, emerged from the envi­ron­men­tal move­ment in the 1960s and 70s as a study of envi­ron­men­tal poli­cies and prac­tices over time. Envi­ron­men­tal his­tory focuses on social, polit­i­cal, and sci­en­tific approaches to the nat­ural world.

The ESA offered a per­fect exam­ple of an envi­ron­men­tal pol­icy within a his­tor­i­cal con­text: “The land­mark ESA passed in 1973 with nearly unan­i­mous Con­gres­sional sup­port,” he explained. “By the end of the 1970s, how­ever, it became one of the country’s most con­tro­ver­sial laws.” Much of that con­tro­versy stemmed from bit­ter strug­gles to clas­sify, or resist clas­si­fi­ca­tion, of endan­gered species. Dr. Alag­ona argued  that these “endan­gered species debates are as much about the pol­i­tics of places as they are about the crea­tures that live there.”

The Endangered Species Act has a checkered history of protecting at-risk species such as the Mojave population of the desert tortoise. Image credit: NRS archivesThe Endan­gered Species Act has a check­ered his­tory of pro­tect­ing at-risk species such as the Mojave pop­u­la­tion of the desert tor­toise. Image credit: NRS archives

Dr. Alag­ona pro­ceeded to illu­mi­nate the his­tory of species con­ser­va­tion in the United States, begin­ning with a debate between eigh­teenth cen­tury nat­u­ral­ists over whether species could even become extinct. “By the 1880s, it became abun­dantly clear that human actions, not just nat­ural forces, could drive species to extinc­tion,” he said, demon­strat­ing with a sober­ing image, circa 1870, of a colos­sal pile of bison skulls in the Amer­i­can Southwest.

He pointed to another exam­ple, the Cal­i­for­nia griz­zly, not­ing that in 1848, the state boasted one griz­zly to every 11 set­tlers. By the 1880s, Cal­i­for­nia griz­zlies were rare; the last recorded sight­ing of a griz­zly was in 1924. “The decline of the griz­zly helped inspire the State’s first grass­roots con­ser­va­tion move­ment,” said Dr. Alagona.

Con­ser­va­tion, a con­cept cru­cial to the Endan­gered Species Act, “is an idea that [nature] reserves could be store houses for bio­log­i­cal diver­sity,” he said. He dated the con­cept “from around 1880.” The notion of con­ser­va­tion expanded in the 1930s under the New Deal with the for­ma­tion of the Civil­ian Con­ser­va­tion Corps, Roosevelt’s “tree army,” which was intended to pro­mote envi­ron­men­tal con­ser­va­tion among other projects. “By the 1960s, the notion that habi­tat con­ser­va­tion should form some part of any envi­ron­men­tal move­ment was widely accepted,” he said.

Today, con­ser­va­tion is one of the prin­ci­ple goals of the ESA, and one of its pri­mary tools for pro­tect­ing endan­gered species from extinc­tion. The ESA requires a habi­tat con­ser­va­tion plan for any area inhab­ited by a species listed as threat­ened or endan­gered, should pri­vate cit­i­zens, Native Amer­i­can tribes, State, or Fed­eral orga­ni­za­tions wish to develop prop­erty in that area. Here in the East­ern Sierra, this require­ment, along with require­ments by Cal­i­for­nia statutes like the Cal­i­for­nia Envi­ron­men­tal Qual­ity Act, present a chal­lenge to devel­op­ers of renew­able energy and oth­ers. That chal­lenge is both good and bad, Dr. Alag­ona argued, and gets to the core of why the ESA remains controversial.

Reserves are no panacea for com­plex social and eco­log­i­cal prob­lems,” Dr. Alag­ona argued.

Cal­i­for­nia, an area along with Ari­zona, the Desert South­west, Florida, and the South­ern Appalachi­ans, of high bio­log­i­cal diver­sity, has 14,000 pro­tected areas of some kind, said Dr. Alag­ona. This land is set aside for the preser­va­tion of endan­gered or threat­ened species like the Cal­i­for­nia golden eagle, San Joaquin kit fox, the Mojave pop­u­la­tion of the desert tor­toise, and the moun­tain yellow-legged frog. Cal­i­for­nia has the sec­ond high­est num­ber of endan­gered species, 303 listed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser­vice, and the largest num­ber of at risk species in the coun­try, Dr. Alag­ona said.

So how has the ESA worked out for the endan­gered species it seeks to pre­serve?  Of the nearly 1500 species ever listed under the ESA, Dr. Alag­ona said, just 10, or 0.6%, have gone extinct. But only 29, or 1.9%, have been delisted due to recov­ery. “De-listing efforts have been con­tro­ver­sial; how recov­ery is mea­sured is not cer­tain; not to men­tion, 40 years is not enough time to expect full recov­ery,” Dr. Alag­ona said. Nev­er­the­less, he argued, while the ESA has done much to pre­vent the extinc­tion of endan­gered species, “it has done much less to aid recovery.”

He noted the chal­lenges of aid­ing the recov­ery of endan­gered species with com­plex habi­tat issues, offer­ing the exam­ple of steel­head trout, listed as threat­ened and endan­gered all along the West Coast. “Many fac­tors have effected the steel­head pop­u­la­tion, but none more than the loss of habi­tat due to dams,” he said. Of the 1400 named dams in Cal­i­for­nia, most were built for a dif­fer­ent kind of con­ser­va­tion: the con­ser­va­tion of water. Given the impor­tance of water to this state, there is there­fore no easy solu­tion to the steelhead’s habi­tat problems.

Mean­while, the desert tor­toise, for an area the size of Mass­a­chu­setts was set aside as pro­tected habi­tat in Cal­i­for­nia, Nevada, Ari­zona, and Utah, “has con­tin­ued to decline due to com­plex, syn­er­getic fac­tors,” Dr. Alag­ona said. Some of these fac­tors include dis­ease, the intro­duc­tion of exotic species, and cli­mate change.

His final argu­ment: the ESA rep­re­sents a his­toric shift in our nation’s approach to pro­tect­ing the envi­ron­ment. Yet, like any sys­tem of thought, it belongs to a par­tic­u­lar his­tor­i­cal period. After 40 years, he said, it’s time to reassess the poli­cies and prac­tices put forth by the ESA.

The tra­di­tional approach to con­ser­va­tion start­ing in the 1930s has been to pro­tect species by set­ting aside nature pre­serves,” he said. “It’s time to rethink the mean­ing of habi­tat, itself.” The future of con­ser­va­tion requires not just cre­at­ing more habi­tats, he argued, but recon­sid­er­ing ‘habi­tat’ “not so much as pro­tected places, but as pro­tected processes. This will require cre­at­ing not just more habi­tats, but cre­at­ing more sus­tain­able landscapes.”

NRS Science Writer Honored for Book on San Francisco Bay

by Rob Irion, direc­tor, UC Santa Cruz Sci­ence Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Program

Natural History of San Francisco Bay (University of California Press, 2011).Nat­ural His­tory of San Fran­cisco Bay (Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia Press, 2011).

Nat­ural His­tory of San Fran­cisco Bay, a book coau­thored by NRS sci­ence writer and UC Santa Cruz Sci­ence Com­mu­ni­ca­tions alumna Kath­leen Wong, has received the Harold Gilliam Award for Excel­lence in Envi­ron­men­tal Report­ing from The Bay Insti­tute of San Francisco.

The 352-page book, pub­lished by the Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia Press as part of its series of Cal­i­for­nia Nat­ural His­tory Guides, explores the hydrol­ogy and geol­ogy of San Fran­cisco Bay and its vast water­shed, its myr­iad plant and ani­mal inhab­i­tants, and the pro­found impacts from the cities, indus­tries and thor­ough­fares that now ring the bay.

The book also cap­tures the opti­mism of researchers involved with one of the country’s largest envi­ron­men­tal restora­tion efforts, as well as the ongo­ing threats to the estu­ary from cli­mate change.

Wong and her coau­thor, San Francisco–based free­lance jour­nal­ist Ariel Rubis­sow Okamoto, were hon­ored by The Bay Insti­tute at an awards cer­e­mony on April 11 at the Aquar­ium of the Bay in San Francisco.

Coauthors Kathleen Wong (left) and Ariel Rubissow Okamoto at The Bay Institute's award ceremony on April 11 in San Francisco. Photo: Robert IrionCoau­thors Kath­leen Wong (left) and Ariel Rubis­sow Okamoto at The Bay Institute’s award cer­e­mony on April 11 in San Fran­cisco. Photo: Robert Irion

Rubis­sow Okamoto, a long­time cor­re­spon­dent on San Fran­cisco Bay water issues, was invited by UC Press to write a primer about the bay—the West Coast’s most urban­ized estuary—and its water­shed. Her vision for the book, infused with human sto­ries and nar­ra­tive jour­nal­ism about restor­ing the estu­ary to health, was not typ­i­cal for an entry in the ven­er­a­ble guide­book series by UC Press. Rubis­sow Okamoto asked Wong to help reshape the man­u­script and to report, write, and edit new mate­r­ial. The pair also acquired his­tor­i­cal and cur­rent photos—including many taken by Wong’s hus­band, Max Eissler.

All told, Rubis­sow Okamoto worked on the vol­ume for about five years, and Wong for more than two. “Giv­ing birth to this book felt end­less at the time, but like any proud par­ent, I now feel the effort was entirely worth­while,” Wong says.

The part­ner­ship was ideal, Wong adds. “[Ariel’s] strong rela­tion­ships with bay sci­en­tists and broad knowl­edge of Cal­i­for­nia water issues have shaped my report­ing and sparked a whole new appre­ci­a­tion for the won­ders of the bay,” she writes in the book’s acknowledgments.

The award is named for Harold Gilliam, a for­mer colum­nist for the San Fran­cisco Chron­i­cle and author of numer­ous books about San Fran­cisco and the region’s nat­ural his­tory. “After expe­ri­enc­ing, research­ing, and writ­ing about San Fran­cisco Bay over a period of 50 years, I was cer­tain that I knew all there was to know about it,” Gilliam says. “I was wrong. Rubis­sow Okamoto and Wong have enabled me to see it in a new dimension—call it 3D, or maybe even 4D.”

Wong earned a dual B.A. in biol­ogy and English/American lit­er­a­ture from UC Santa Cruz before enrolling in the Sci­ence Com­mu­ni­ca­tion Pro­gram in 1998. She worked as an intern at U.S. News & World Report, then as a staff reporter for the Mon­terey County Her­ald. For sev­eral years, Wong was senior edi­tor at Cal­i­for­nia Wild, the for­mer mag­a­zine of the Cal­i­for­nia Acad­emy of Sci­ences. She now works as prin­ci­pal pub­li­ca­tions coor­di­na­tor for the Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia Nat­ural Reserve Sys­tem in Oakland.

Rubis­sow Okamoto has worked as a free­lance jour­nal­ist for 25 years. Her main clients have included the Sierra Club, Urban Ecol­ogy, the Oceanic Soci­ety, the San Fran­cisco Estu­ary Part­ner­ship, and the U.S. Geo­log­i­cal Sur­vey. Her arti­cles have appeared in the San Fran­cisco Chron­i­cle and Bay Nature. She also is the author of Guide to the Parks, the first guide to the Golden Gate National Recre­ation Area.