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 For Immediate Release,  December 22, 2010 Contact: Dr. Robin Silver, (602) 799-3275 Suit Launched to Save Mount Graham  Red Squirrel From University   of Arizona Telescope  Project  TUCSON, Ariz.—  The Center for Biological Diversity, Maricopa Audubon Society and Mount Graham  Coalition today filed a notice of intent to sue the U.S. Forest Service to stop  any further destructive impact from the Mount Graham telescopes on the  critically endangered Mount Graham red squirrel. Today's legal action requests  that the Forest Service seek a new Endangered Species Act evaluation of the  project from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service by Feb. 22, 2011, or face  litigation.
 The Endangered Species Act requires that all  federal agencies consult with the Fish and Wildlife Service if their actions  jeopardize an endangered species. The Forest Service manages the land occupied  by the University   of Arizona’s telescopes.
 
 The impact of the telescope project has been  exempt from any evaluation since the university obtained a congressional exemption in 1988. The exemption shields the  telescopes from any environmental review as long as they don't affect more than  8.6 acres. The project’s affected area is now more than 40 percent larger than  that, however, and is no longer exempt from review.
 
 “The effects of this project have gone far  beyond what they were supposed to be. We are not going to let the Mount Graham  red squirrel be pushed over the brink of extinction,” said the Center’s Robin  Silver.
 
 Only about 200 Mount Graham  red squirrels survive. The squirrels are severely imperiled primarily because  of the piecemeal destruction of their forest habitat. In addition to forest clearcutting  in the area immediately adjoining the telescopes, nearly one-third of the squirrels' essential spruce-fir forest habitat   (approximately 250 acres) was destroyed in a Forest Service-lit backburn fire to   protect the telescopes in 2004.
 
 “While global warming, small population  dynamics, wildfire potential and forest insect pests remain problematic, if  this rare squirrel is going to survive, we’ve got to control the destructive  presence of unnecessary buildings in the heart of its habitat,” said Silver.
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