
Development and destruction of wetlands have eliminated red-legged frogs from more than 70% of their historic habitat.
Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, September 17, 2008.
![]() Development and destruction of wetlands have eliminated red-legged frogs from more than 70% of their historic habitat. |
California's red-legged frog may be getting some of its land back.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed on Tuesday to more than
triple the habitat set aside for the threatened frog, citing scientific
miscalculations and political manipulation by former Interior Department
official Julie MacDonald that had greatly reduced the protected
acreage.
MacDonald resigned in May 2007 after an internal investigation
showed she had altered scientific conclusions to reduce protections for
endangered species and had provided internal documents to lobbyists. Since then,
the department has been reconsidering eight decisions made while MacDonald
oversaw the endangered species program for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
part of the Interior Department.
Tuesday's decision, a result of that
review, would create a 1.8-million-acre habitat in 28 Central and Northern
California counties. Development and destruction of wetlands have eliminated the
frogs from more than 70% of their historic range. MacDonald would have reduced
what was left of the frog's range by 82%.
An Interior Department
investigation found that MacDonald pressured staff to count three sub-species of
the California tiger salamander as one, which undermined the case for
protection. A federal judge overturned that decision in 2005, saying it was made
"without even a semblance of agency reasoning."
The investigation
determined that MacDonald improperly provided department information to
lobbyists and private-sector interests, such as the California Farm Bureau and
the Building Industry Assn. of Southern California.
"MacDonald appears to
have a close personal and business relationship with a Farm Bureau lobbyist,"
the report said.
The public will have 60 days to comment on the proposed
habitat. The agency will undertake an economic analysis to determine if the
financial burden on property owners from habitat protections is outweighed by
any benefit to species.
The Fish and Wildlife Service previously
released a study that showed nearly $500 million in costs to home builders for
protecting the frog's habitat.