Unprecedented Conservation Efforts Keep Greater Sage-Grouse Off Endangered Species List

After more than a decade of work, the collaborative approach to protecting the bird pays off.

Today the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that the Greater Sage-grouse, an iconic bird of the American West, does not warrant listing under the Endangered Species Act.

Conservationists, ranchers, politicians, and industry have been on edge for months in anticipation of the decision, which was announced just days before a court-ordered September 30 deadline. The possibility of a listing had sparked fears of in the sage-grouse鈥檚 expansive habitat out West, as it would have restricted energy development, livestock grazing, and residential construction. States and federal agencies that control public lands have scrambled to create updated sage-grouse recovery plans in order to avert a listing. And many conservationists worried that a formal listing could undermine the serious鈥攁nd pioneering鈥攙oluntary efforts taken to protect the bird鈥檚 sagebrush habitat in recent years.

Indeed, Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell confirmed in a that 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. That includes the Bureau of Land Management鈥檚 14 new sage-grouse recovery plans鈥consolidated from 98 distinct land use plans, all of which were officially formalized today鈥攖hat will conserve 35 million acres of federal lands across 10 states.  In total, the collective plans to protect the bird 鈥渟ignificantly reduced threats to the Greater Sage-grouse across 90 percent of the species鈥 breeding habitat,鈥 enabling the organization to conclude that the bird did not warrant listing, FWS stated in their release announcing the decision.

鈥淭his is truly a historic effort鈥攐ne that represents extraordinary collaboration across the American West,鈥 Jewell said in FWS's statement. 鈥淚t demonstrates that the Endangered Species Act is an effective and flexible tool and a critical catalyst for conservation鈥攅nsuring that future generations can enjoy the diversity of wildlife that we do today."

鈥淭his is a new lease on life for the Greater Sage-grouse and the entire sagebrush ecosystem,鈥 said 爆料公社 President and CEO David Yarnold. 鈥淯nprecedented cooperation by private landowners, states, and the federal government has created a framework for conservation at a scale unique in the world.鈥

When FWS first announced that the bird would be considered for a federal listing in 2010, regional conservation efforts had already been underway. 鈥淭his is exactly what 爆料公社 has been working toward for 10 years,鈥 says Brian Rutledge, VP and Central Flyway policy advisor for 爆料公社. Rutledge and his team helped create a science-based approach to sage-grouse protections that significantly reduces disturbance in core habitat鈥攁n approach that鈥檚 been adopted in state and federal plans alike. 鈥淭his is the kind of cooperation the Endangered Species Act was designed to encourage,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 intended to list everything under the sun; it was to motivate conservation before listing became necessary.鈥  

The Enormous Effort to Stave Off a Listing

The sagebrush steppe is an old-growth forest in miniature, with some species of the fragrant shrubs living for more than a century. Development has cut the habitat to half its historical size, and today it spans 173 million acres across 11 states. The sage-grouse is inextricably linked to this sagebrush ecosystem: The plants provide cover from raptors and other predators, serve as shelter for nesting birds in the summer, and supply the grouse鈥檚 sole source of food in the winter鈥攊n fact, the birds actually gain weight eating the leaves during the harsh winter months. But as the habitat has shrunk, the birds鈥 numbers have plummeted, from millions a century ago to between 200,000 and 500,000 today. (Scientists count males at leks, or mating grounds, to extrapolate a rough population estimate; obtaining an exact count is impossible because the birds are essentially invisible in the vast sagebrush sea.)

The Greater Sage-grouse is an indicator species of the health of this entire ecosystem. The desire to keep the bird off the list鈥攁nd stave off the many restrictions that come with a threatened or endangered status鈥攈as generated a rare show of cooperation from those interested in using the habitat for drilling, ranching, or other economic endeavors. In consultation with conservation groups and government agencies, they have made ambitious commitments to protect enough space for the bird while still permitting some development. Today鈥檚 announcement is a ratification that the approach is working. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing landscape-scale conservation like we鈥檝e never seen before,鈥 says 爆料公社鈥檚 Rutledge.

Rutledge helped create a Wyoming sage-grouse management plan that allows sage-grouse and industry to co-exist. The state is home to 37 percent of the sage-grouse population, and is also a major producer of coal, natural gas, and beef鈥攁ll of which rely on the same sagebrush habitat. Under Wyoming鈥檚 plan, surface disturbance鈥攆rom roads to wind turbines to gas wells鈥攊n areas critical to sage-grouse are limited to a maximum of 5 percent per square mile. Since Wyoming adopted the scheme in 2010, it has successfully protected 15 million acres of sagebrush habitat. Following this success, other states put similar plans in place, thus reducing threats to birds on tens of millions of acres while still allowing for development.

Private landowners have also stepped up to implement protections for the bird, in exchange for guarantees that they won鈥檛 be required to jump through additional hoops should the grouse ever be listed. Through the Sage Grouse Initiative (SGI), a voluntary program created by the USDA, by the end of 2014 more than 1,100 ranchers have restored or conserved on private lands in 11 states, many in the form of conservation easements, which preclude the land from being developed or converted. They鈥檝e also altered their grazing systems, removed conifer and invasive cheatgrass that encroaches on sagebrush, reseeded former rangeland with native plants, and removed or marked lethal fencing (the bird鈥檚 sideways-pointing eyes are great for spotting predators, but make them blind to fences directly ahead).

This rancher involvement represents an enormous shift. For instance, the SGI reports that the amount of land set aside for Natural Resources Conservation Service-sponsored easements increased 1,809 percent since the partnership began. The Big Empty, as the sagebrush ecosystem has been called, is finally getting the attention, and economic support, that it deserves, says Rutledge. In August, the USDA announced that it would invest through 2018 in the program; to date, SGI and its partners have invested more than $420 million. Industry has gotten onboard in unexpected ways as well, altering their practices to better suit the bird. For example, since 2010, the state has seen a 60-percent reduction in conventional drilling, and a 1,600-percent increase in directional drilling, which allows companies to access deposits from the side, thus protecting sensitive lands directly above.

The majority of the bird鈥檚 habitat, 64 percent, is on federal lands, and the Bureau of Land Management controls most of those approximately 60 million acres. Earlier this year, the BLM and U.S. Forest Service released for public lands in 10 states. The plans, developed over the past three years with the states and with input from local stakeholders, including ranchers, conservationists, and industry representatives, place restrictions on 35 million acres of priority bird habitat to prevent degradation. Even though the plans weren鈥檛 formalized until today, the drafts were taken into consideration, says Pat Deibert, national sage-grouse coordinator for the FWS, who was responsible for crafting the sprawling species report鈥攃hock full of information on the major threats facing the bird and efforts to combat them鈥攖hat drove the listing decision.

鈥淭here鈥檚 been a lot of criticism of the plans鈥攕ome say they didn鈥檛 go far enough, others say they went too far,鈥 says Deibert. Some environmental groups, including Western Watershed, have if the bird is not listed, because they believe the federal plans allow too much development and don鈥檛 go far enough to protect sagebrush habitat.

However, recent research suggests that coexistence between the bird and the boom is possible; for example, a demonstrates that sage-grouse habitat overlaps with just 2 percent of prime drilling area.

Rutledge says the plans will evolve and improve as sagebrush conservation continues鈥攁nd conservation must continue, because as Rutledge points out, there鈥檚 still a long way to go before the ecosystem is restored.

The Future of the Sagebrush Sea

Deibert says that her office will closely monitor the implementation of the newly approved state plans, as well as continue to track other on-the-ground activities. FWS will also continue to enroll private landowners in sage-grouse conservation agreements. She also says there鈥檚 talk of establishing one or more new offices devoted to sagebrush ecosystem management. 鈥淲e have to keep this momentum going, to make sure we don鈥檛 slip back into our old ways,鈥 Deibert says. 鈥淭hat wouldn鈥檛 help anybody. Not industry, not ranchers鈥攃ertainly not the bird or the ecosystem.鈥

Rutledge says that in addition to continuing the restoration efforts underway, new research will likely be needed to solve major challenges鈥攍ike how to grow sagebrush. For such a hardy, long-lived shrub, it鈥檚 proven. 鈥淭his is the beginning of the sagebrush conservation work, not the end,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檝e decided how to limit further disturbance, and agreed that we鈥檙e not going to keep hammering the crap out of the landscape. But it can鈥檛 recover on its own.鈥

The Greater Sage-grouse is an avatar of the sagebrush landscape, and today鈥檚 conservation victory isn鈥檛 about a single species. Core grouse habitat in Wyoming, for instance, was found to overlap with鈥檚 winter range, stopover areas, and migration corridors. And a recent of sagebrush-dependent songbirds in Oregon discovered that removing invasive plants to help retain sage-grouse habitat had a positive impact on other birds鈥攆or example, Brewer鈥檚 Sparrow abundance grew by 55 percent and Green-tailed Towhee numbers increased by 81 percent.

Protecting the Greater Sage-grouse鈥攖his odd bird that demands attention with weird pops and whistles during mating season, and then melts into the sagebrush for the rest of the year鈥攗ltimately means protecting the some 350 species that call this vast swath of the American West home.