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 For Immediate  Release, August 19, 2009 
              
                | Contacts: | Becky King, Assistant Attorney, San Miguel County, (970) 728-3879 Amy Atwood, Senior  Attorney, Center for Biological Diversity, (541) 914-8372
 Mark Salvo, Director, Sagebrush   Sea Campaign, WildEarth  Guardians, (503) 757-4221
 |  Gunnison Sage Grouse Wins  Another Chance at ProtectionMost  Populations Declined Again in 2009
 TELLURIDE, Colo.— A western Colorado county and a coalition  of national and regional environmental organizations have agreed to settle a lawsuit against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service challenging  an April 2006 decision not to list the highly imperiled Gunnison sage grouse  under the Endangered Species Act. The agreement, which was filed yesterday U.S.  District Court in Washington,   D.C., requires the agency to prepare  a new listing decision by June 30, 2010. The agency determined in March that  its April 18, 2006 denial of Endangered Species Act protection to Gunnison sage grouse was tainted by interference by former  Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Interior Julie MacDonald and other Bush administration  officials. 
 "We are eager to secure protection for the Gunnison  sage grouse as soon as possible. Long-term viability of the species is  unquestionably at risk now, and every additional delay decreases the likelihood  of full recovery," said Commissioner Joan May of San Miguel County,  Colorado.
 
 The settlement follows discouraging news this spring: Annual counts revealed  that all but two populations of Gunnison sage grouse  have continued to decline in 2009. Some populations have been reduced to fewer  than 10 birds.
 “Endangered wildlife  like Gunnison sage grouse deserve a fair chance at protection,” said Erin  Robertson, senior staff biologist for the Center for Native Ecosystems in Denver. “After years of  political interference, it is time for a speedy, unbiased decision that will  provide the Gunnison sage grouse the help  it needs.” 
 Audubon has identified Gunnison sage grouse as among the 10 most endangered  birds in the United States.  The Endangered Species Coalition also released a report last December listing the  Gunnison sage grouse as one of the most  imperiled species in the country. Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar  released a report in March, The State of  the Birds 2009, that found that western deserts and grasslands — home to Gunnison sage grouse and other sensitive species — are  among the most degraded habitats in the country.
 
 "We are keen to have federal protections in  place, to protect not only this species in serious decline but also an  important native landscape of the west that serves as its habitat," said  Hilary White, director of the Sheep Mountain Alliance.
 
 In addition to San Miguel County and the Sheep Mountain Alliance, organizations  seeking to list Gunnison sage grouse under the  Endangered Species Act include (in alphabetical order) Audubon, the Black  Canyon Audubon Society, the Center for Biological Diversity, the Center for  Native Ecosystems, the Larch Company, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility,  and WildEarth Guardians. The coalition is represented by attorneys with the  Center for Biological Diversity, San Miguel County, and Western Environmental Law   Center.
 
 “Gunnison sage-grouse populations and habitat  conditions have worsened in recent years,” said Mark Salvo, Sagebrush Sea  Campaign Director for WildEarth Guardians. “Listing would help recover the  species.”
 
 The Gunnison sage grouse is distinct from greater sage grouse, identified by  researchers as early as the 1970s and recognized as a new species by the  American Ornithologists' Union in 2000. While  its historic range may have included parts of Colorado,  Utah, New Mexico,  and Arizona, the species now occurs only in  eight small populations in southwestern Colorado  and southeastern Utah.  Gunnison sage grouse have experienced  significant declines from historic numbers and only about 4,000 breeding  individuals remain. Livestock grazing, oil and gas drilling, motorized  recreation, and urbanization have contributed to the long-term decline of Gunnison sage grouse.
 
 “If the agency makes  a new decision based on science and not politics, our children and  grandchildren may be able to see this iconic species in the wild,” said Amy  Atwood, senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity.
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