Request for emergency relisting of Yellowstone grizzlies

Request for emergency relisting of Yellowstone grizzlies

Target:
U.S. Department of Interior
Sponsored by: 

The undersigned request that President Obama instruct the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service to immediately restore endangered species protections to the Yellowstone grizzly bear population for the following reasons:


1.)    The Yellowstone grizzly's key food, whitebark pine seeds, has suddenly collapsed due to global warming. The trees are dying from mountain pine beetles that have moved higher up into the whitebark forests because of the warmer winter temperatures of the last decade. The irreversible loss of whitebark pine nuts will result in lower reproductive rates of grizzlies and much higher human-caused mortality.

      

2.)    The highest death rate ever recorded for Yellowstone grizzlies occurred in 2008, the first year since the bear was delisted by the USFWS in 2007.  The government estimates 79 grizzlies died in the Yellowstone ecosystem. A minimum of 37 of these deaths came directly from humans.


3.)    The Department of Interior, represented by the USFWS, refused to consider restoring federal protection to Yellowstone's grizzlies at a court mandated settlement meeting in Missoula Montana on July 17, 2009. Advocacy for grizzly bear protection by federal agencies has been appalling; fresh leadership is sorely needed in these USFWS positions. For this reason, we are requesting the President to instruct the Secretary of Interior to order relisting.


4.)    12 grizzly bears have already died this year in the Yellowstone region. The majority of bear deaths take place in the fall, during hunting season when grizzlies--deprived of their most important fall food, whitebark pine nuts are expected to wander into lower elevations where they die as a result of encounters with humans. To avoid repeating last year's slaughter of Yellowstone's grizzlies, we are requesting an immediate relisting.


5.)    Current management practices cannot save the grizzly in Yellowstone from present day unsustainable mortality; adequate regulatory mechanisms are not in place. Only immediate restoration of ESA protections will insure the Yellowstone grizzly has a chance of surviving the staggering global changes that threaten both bears and humans. The Yellowstone grizzly is a barometer of the health of the ecosystem and a symbol of the park's wildness. The bears continued presence in the Yellowstone area is a metaphor for survival that lends us all courage.


For additional Information can go to:

http://e360.yale.edu/content/feature.msp?id=2152

The undersigned request that President Obama instruct the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service to immediately restore endangered species protections to the Yellowstone grizzly bear population for the following reasons:


1.)    The Yellowstone grizzly's key food, whitebark pine seeds, has suddenly collapsed due to global warming. The trees are dying from mountain pine beetles that have moved higher up into the whitebark forests because of the warmer winter temperatures of the last decade. The irreversible loss of whitebark pine nuts will result in lower reproductive rates of grizzlies and much higher human-caused mortality.

      

2.)    The highest death rate ever recorded for Yellowstone grizzlies occurred in 2008, the first year since the bear was delisted by the USFWS in 2007.  The government estimates 79 grizzlies died in the Yellowstone ecosystem. A minimum of 37 of these deaths came directly from humans.


3.)    The Department of Interior, represented by the USFWS, refused to consider restoring federal protection to Yellowstone's grizzlies at a court mandated settlement meeting in Missoula Montana on July 17, 2009. Advocacy for grizzly bear protection by federal agencies has been appalling; fresh leadership is sorely needed in these USFWS positions. For this reason, we are requesting the President to instruct the Secretary of Interior to order relisting.


4.)    12 grizzly bears have already died this year in the Yellowstone region. The majority of bear deaths take place in the fall, during hunting season when grizzlies--deprived of their most important fall food, whitebark pine nuts are expected to wander into lower elevations where they die as a result of encounters with humans. To avoid repeating last year's slaughter of Yellowstone's grizzlies, we are requesting an immediate relisting.


5.)    Current management practices cannot save the grizzly in Yellowstone from present day unsustainable mortality; adequate regulatory mechanisms are not in place. Only immediate restoration of ESA protections will insure the Yellowstone grizzly has a chance of surviving the staggering global changes that threaten both bears and humans. The Yellowstone grizzly is a barometer of the health of the ecosystem and a symbol of the park's wildness. The bears continued presence in the Yellowstone area is a metaphor for survival that lends us all courage.


For additional Information can go to:

http://e360.yale.edu/content/feature.msp?id=2152

The undersigned request that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service restore endangered species protections to the Yellowstone grizzly bear population immediately because:


1.)    Its key food source, whitebark pine seeds, is collapsing due to combined effects of global warming, mountain pine beetle, and non-native disease, blister rust: the loss of whitebark pine will result in lower reproductive rates of grizzlies and higher human-caused mortalities.

2.)    Human-caused mortality rates have already climbed to unsustainable levels since grizzlies were delisted with 37 grizzlies killed in 2008.

3.)    The Yellowstone grizzly bear is a barometer of the health of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, a symbol of its wildness, and the essence of what makes Yellowstone, Yellowstone.

4.)    Adequate regulatory mechanisms are not in place to maintain a healthy grizzly bear population in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.

5.)    The current grizzly bear population of 400-600 grizzly bears in Yellowstone is too low: to achieve recovery we must reach 2,000 grizzly bears in connected ecosystems between Yellowstone and Canada.  This will necessitate grizzly bear recovery in the Salmon Selway Ecosystem.

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We signed the "Request for emergency relisting of Yellowstone grizzlies" petition!
# 230:
10:45 am PST, Nov 1, E. Paul Pepin, Canada
# 229:
10:20 am PST, Nov 1, Louise Auray-Pepin, Canada
# 228:
4:58 am PDT, Oct 31, Helle Collin, Denmark
# 227:
5:33 pm PDT, Oct 17, Donald Hurley, Massachusetts
# 226:
5:33 pm PDT, Oct 17, Donald Hurley, Massachusetts
# 225:
8:34 pm PDT, Oct 15, Sandra Ziebell, Texas
Please restore the grizzly bear to the endangered species list. This country would lose a national treasure if these brillant and magnificant bears are hunted and killed. My family has been fortunate enough to see grizzly and black bears in the wild and I hope that generations of Americans will still have that opportunity.
# 224:
7:16 pm PDT, Oct 8, Nadine Wyatt, Tennessee
# 223:
4:31 am PDT, Oct 8, Jeanette steffi Gahid, Philippines
# 222:
3:09 am PDT, Oct 8, Phil Cassell, Canada
# 221:
9:09 am PDT, Oct 6, Luke Keller, Pennsylvania
# 220:
9:49 am PDT, Oct 5, Marilyn Sass, California
# 219:
8:15 pm PDT, Sep 30, Glenn Brown, Nebraska
# 218:
2:14 pm PDT, Sep 20, Mary Hockett, Alabama
# 217:
5:43 am PDT, Sep 9, Antonio Ruiz, New York
We are all connected; what affects these magnificent creatures and their or our kids enviorments also affects us either immediately or in the very near future. Lets start giving a damm!
# 216:
5:25 am PDT, Sep 8, Maryelle Anderson, United Kingdom
# 215:
7:45 am PDT, Sep 1, Elizabeth Engel, Illinois
# 214:
6:38 am PDT, Sep 1, Rob Chenoweth, Illinois
Please relist the grizzlies as endangered. I want my kids, and grandchildren to see them some day.
# 213:
7:05 pm PDT, Aug 20, Wendy Yukihiro, Washington
Dear U.S Department of Interior we the people you love nature and the animal that live within it are requesting that you restore the Yellowstone grizzlies as a endangered species protection to the bears Immediately because. Their key food source the whitebark pine seeds , Humancaused mortality rates have climbed so grizzlies were delisted with 37 killed in 2008.
# 212:
2:32 pm PDT, Aug 11, Rosana Marinho, Brazil
# 211:
3:06 am PDT, Aug 8, Gemma Hollingsworth, Australia
# 210:
4:40 pm PDT, Aug 6, William Lawson, California
# 209:
6:24 am PDT, Aug 6, Mick Gill, Australia
# 208:
3:15 am PDT, Aug 6, Ainslie Gee, New Zealand
# 207:
7:56 pm PDT, Aug 5, Jessica Berter, Ohio
# 206:
12:58 pm PDT, Aug 5, Jill Epley, Indiana
# 205:
11:47 am PDT, Aug 1, Angela VanCleve, Florida
# 204:
6:41 am PDT, Aug 1, Laura Hernandez, Mexico
# 203:
1:32 pm PDT, Jul 30, Brigid Courtney, Massachusetts
Please help these bears.
# 202:
5:00 am PDT, Jul 27, Mary Ann Clark, Connecticut
# 201:
3:01 am PDT, Jul 26, Chris Beal, United Kingdom
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