Politics & Government

Yellowstone Grizzly Bears: Feds To Review Revoked Protections

The animals will stay under state jurisdiction and off the threatened species list while the review is pending, officials said.

BILLINGS, MT — Several hundred grizzly bears in and around Yellowstone National Park were designated as a threatened species status until federal wildlife officials revoked that status on July 31. The move could have opened up grizzlies to possible future trophy hunts in Wyoming, Montana and Idaho.

But a recent court ruling that retained protections for gray wolves in the Great Lakes region prompted federal officials on Wednesday to say they'll take a look at the now-revoked grizzly protections. In the wolf case, a federal appeals court in Washington D.C. said the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service needed to give more consideration to how a species' loss of historical habitat could impact its recovery.

Like wolves, grizzlies have seen a strong recovery over the past several decades in remote regions of America, but remain absent from the vast majority of their historical range.

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In its response to the appeals court ruling, the wildlife agency said it's now seeking public comment on the potential implications for Yellowstone bears.

The animals will stay under state jurisdiction and off the threatened species list while the review is pending, said Fish and Wildlife spokesman Steve Segin. The agency plans to release its conclusions by March 31.

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Grizzlies remain protected as a threatened species outside of the Yellowstone region and Alaska.

Other species could be affected by the ruling, Segin said, adding that it likely would have to be under similar circumstances where a decision was being made on just a segment of a species' entire population.

Andrea Santarsiere with the Center for Biological Diversity said Wednesday's announcement was an attempt to paper over what she called "fatal flaws" in the decision to lift protections.

"Yellowstone's grizzly bears remain at risk and no amount of bureaucratic jujitsu by the Trump administration will change that fact," Santarsiere said.

The question in the Great Lakes wolf case was whether some members of an animal population can meet the legal definition of recovered even as the species struggles or is nonexistent elsewhere.

A three-judge panel concluded federal officials erroneously considered the status of the Great Lakes population in a vacuum, leaving wolves elsewhere in the country in "legal limbo" after wolves in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota lost protections. Those protections later were restored by a federal judge.

Yellowstone's bears make up one of the largest populations of grizzlies in the Lower 48. They've been isolated for decades from other concentrations of bruins, including an estimated 1,000 grizzlies in northwest Montana.

By MATTHEW BROWN, Associated Press

Photo credit: Jim Urquhart/Associated Pres

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