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Friday, April 13, 2012
Rally-goers Tell US Fish and Wildlife to End the Freeze on Mexican Wolf Releases
Friday the 13th Event Aims to Change Luck for Endangered Lobos at Risk from Inbreeding
Contact: Bryan Bird (505) 988-9126 x1157
Albuquerque, NM — Supporters of the world’s most
endangered wolf gathered Friday, April 13 at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service’s regional office to press the agency to release more Mexican gray
wolves into the wild in New Mexico and Arizona.
Participants carrying larger than life wolf
silhouettes, banners, and signs with slogans like “Keep Your Promise-End the
Freeze” lined the street and listened to conservationists, biologists, and
community advocates for the wolves talk about the need for new releases to help
the at-risk wild population of less than 60 Mexican wolves.
Bryan Bird, Wild Places Program Director for
WildEarth Guardians, said, “Animals like the Mexican gray wolf have to live in
the wild to achieve recovery. With a wild population this small, these wolves
are at risk of a second extinction from inbreeding, disease, and catastrophic
events. The Fish and Wildlife Service acknowledges the need but has
inexplicably frozen releases for over three years. They need to respond to
urgent recommendations from scientists and get more wolves into the wild now.”
Retired teacher Jean Ossorio, who has spent numerous
days camping in the Blue Range Wolf Reintroduction Area in the hopes of seeing
and hearing wolves, told the crowd “If we fail to increase the wild population,
it will eventually wink out. That day will only be hastened if no new wolves
are released to replace those poached and to enhance the genetic composition of
the packs in the wild. It's time to release more wolves!”
Rally organizers thanked the crowd for coming out on
a weekday, saying it was necessary to get USFWS southwest regional director Ben
Tuggle’s attention. Steve Capra, Executive Director for the New Mexico
Wilderness called on Dr. Tuggle to keep a year old promise to ramp up releases.
Capra added that the agency is stalling on a rule
change to expedite getting wolves on the ground in New Mexico.
“Releasing wolves directly into New Mexico--where
the best remaining unoccupied habitat exists—is critical to quickly boosting
numbers and gene diversity in the wild population, but an outdated rule
prevents direct releases into New Mexico. Dr. Tuggle could easily change this
rule by issuing an Environmental Assessment that’s been sitting on his desk for
years and putting it out for public review, but instead he’s ignoring it, and
the members of congress, the scientific community, and the vast majority of
people in New Mexico who have asked him to get it done.”
Polling[i] of voters in
2008 demonstrated strong public support for the Mexican wolf in the Southwest,
with 69% of New Mexicans and 77% of Arizonans saying they supported the Mexican
wolf reintroduction. Almost two thirds of New Mexico voters believe the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service should manage Mexican gray wolves to ensure their
recovery and not risk extinction again.
“Interior Secretary Salazar and Director Tuggle are
playing politics with these wolves’ lives and ignoring their public trust
responsibility to these magnificent, important animals and to the people of New
Mexico” said Phil Carter of Animal Protection of New Mexico. “It’s already been
over 1,100 days since a new wolf was released on the ground and only one new
wolf was released in the last 2 years before that—the stalling has to stop
before there is a second extinction of Mexican gray wolves in the wild.”
The rally was organized by:
Lobos of the Southwest/mexicanwolves.org ·
New Mexico Wilderness Alliance · WildEarth Guardians Animal
Protection of New Mexico · Sierra Club Rio Grande
Chapter · Center for Biological Diversity Southwest Environmental Center
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