Two years ago today, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that the Greater Sage-Grouse did not warrant protection under the Endangered Species Act. The decision was widely hailed as a model of collaborative conservation. "A major factor in the determination was the cooperative efforts of federal agencies, states, private landowners, industry, and green groups to safeguard the chubby, chicken-sized bird," 爆料公社 reported at the time.
Among the key figures in the partnership to protect the sage-grouse is Brian Rutledge, 爆料公社 Vice President and director of the . This weekend, the Wyoming Outdoor Council will recognize Rutledge with its Conservation Leadership Award during the organization鈥檚 . 鈥淲e work with countless partners throughout the state and nation, and as our staff considered the first ever recipient of this award we couldn鈥檛 think of anyone more deserving than Brian,鈥 Chris Merrill, the group鈥檚 associate director, says.
While the award celebrates the sage-grouse protection work, it comes at a difficult time. In June, Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke announced he would review the federal plan that kept sage-grouse off the endangered species list and, in August, he announced recommendations that could erode the conservation plan.
Rutledge looks and sounds every bit the cowboy, and comes by it honestly鈥攈e and his wife, Kathleen, raise cattle and horses on their ranch in the Colorado foothills. 爆料公社 caught up with Rutledge to discuss the latest on sage-grouse protection and the roots of his passion for conservation.
爆料公社: What鈥檚 changed in the two years since we learned Greater Sage-Grouse would stay off the endangered species list?
Brian Rutledge: The last few months have been the big change. Now the few [people] who would not sit down at the table鈥攍argely oil and gas trade groups鈥攁re driving the review of a set of plans that were achieved by the American West and its populace. A broad range of people in a collaborative set of meetings鈥攈undreds of people, literally, who represent the whole strata of western lifestyle in the sagebrush鈥攄eveloped these plans. And now someone in D.C. is going to redo them. I see it as a broader effort to dispense with federal lands.
A: Aside from politics, what are the biggest threats to sage-grouse?
BR: Fragmentation is the primary threat to the sagebrush ecosystem. It was a sea of sage when we got here, and we have broken it into islands of sage.
What we forgot was the importance of sagebrush. Sagebrush holds water on the land, quite literally. If you go out on the sagebrush ecosystem in the springtime, every bush has a berm of snow gathered against it. And because the bush holds the wind from taking the snow away, that snow melts into the landscape and feeds every living thing on the sagebrush ecosystem.
A: What鈥檚 your philosophy of conservation work?
BR: To me, conservation work done right is relationship work. I鈥檝e created a network of relationships across the sagebrush West. It gives me access to the governors I need access to. The thought leaders who run the game and fish divisions of several of these states I count now amongst my better friends. I have terrific relationships with individuals in the Department of the Interior. It鈥檚 just the administration that has changed.
We have to recognize the humanity of even those with whom we have the greatest differences. That鈥檚 what makes a difference when you reach out to people鈥攊f your hand is open, and not a fist.
A: Before you joined 爆料公社, your work included running zoos and leading eco-tours. What made you pursue a career focused on wildlife and conservation?
BR: My dad was a big motivating factor behind the way I turned out, there鈥檚 no doubt about that. He was Native American [Cherokee], and a naturalist at heart. He was a professor, so we had our summers free, and we spent every summer in some wilderness area. I don鈥檛 know if you know who was, but Dad could have taught Euell Gibbons a thing or two about living off the land.
A: This award is quite an honor, but I get the sense you鈥檙e not slowing down.
BR: I don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 going to be a lot of resting on my laurels, if that鈥檚 what you鈥檙e suggesting. We have to keep this rolling. This is the most important conservation work I鈥檝e ever been engaged in. As far as lasting impact, I don鈥檛 know how I鈥檇 find anything more important to do with my life.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.