Texas Wild-Rice Monitoring in San Marcos

The 2010 Texas wild-rice monitoring was a great success! In fact, over 35 employees and volunteers from Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD), the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Texas State University, Texas Master Naturalists, Lower Colorado River Authority, Texas Department of Transportation and the San Marcos River Foundation participated in the wild-rice monitoring project. Texas wild rice is an aquatic, perennial grass found only in the upper two miles of the San Marcos River just below Aquarena Springs. The monitoring process takes approximately seven days and many biologist and volunteers to complete the task.

This plant species is federally listed as endangered because the river water is being impacted by the growth of the City of San Marcos and by recreational users. In the past, there has also been some impact from nutria, a non-native aquatic rodent introduced from South America. Continue reading Texas Wild-Rice Monitoring in San Marcos

Rocky Mountain Wolves Not Endangered Anymore!

Grey wolf

Gray wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountains are increasing in population size and no longer requires the protection of the Endangered Species Act, Deputy Secretary of the Interior Lynn Scarlett announced today. As a result, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will remove the species from the federal list of threatened and endangered species. Scarlett said:

“The wolf population in the Northern Rockies has far exceeded its recovery goal and continues to expand its size and range. States, tribes, conservation groups, federal agencies and citizens of both regions can be proud of their roles in this remarkable conservation success story.”

Continue reading Rocky Mountain Wolves Not Endangered Anymore!

Latest Preble’s Meadow Jumping Mouse News

Latest Preble’s Meadow Jumping Mouse News 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service revised the 2005 proposed rule to delist the Preble’s meadow jumping mouse (Zapus hudsonius preblei). It proposed to amend the listing for the Preble’s meadow jumping mouse to specify over what portion of its range the subspecies is threatened.

The best scientific and commercial data available demonstrates that:

The Preble’s meadow jumping mouse is a valid subspecies and should not be delisted based upon taxonomic revision; the subspecies is not threatened throughout all of its range; and the portion of the current range of the subspecies located in Colorado represents a significant portion of the current range where the Preble’s meadow jumping mouse is likely to become endangered within the foreseeable future, and the subspecies in that portion of its range should retain its threatened status.

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