| For Immediate Release, July 6, 2018 Contact: Collette Adkins, (651) 955-3821, [email protected]
 Dozens  of Small Business Owners, Religious Groups, Scientists Ask Supreme Court to Maintain  Habitat Protections for Endangered Frogs                           NEW ORLEANS— From economists and  scientists to religious leaders and business owners, dozens of groups this week  submitted “friend of the court” briefs asking the U.S. Supreme Court to  maintain protections for 1,600 acres of “critical habitat” designated in Louisiana  for endangered dusky gopher frogs.  “It’s inspiring to see so many people eloquently  urge our nation’s highest court to protect endangered wildlife,” said Collette  Adkins, a Center attorney fighting in the Supreme Court for the frog’s  protections. “While these folks represent a wide range of interests, they’re  united in supporting these little frogs, their habitat protections and the Endangered  Species Act. Like most Americans, these scientists, businesspeople and faith  leaders recognize that imperiled animals need a place to live.” The U.S. Supreme Court in  January granted a “petition for  certiorari,” filed by the timber company Weyerhaeuser, to reconsider a June 2016 decision from a  three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals that upheld a 2012 rule establishing the  frog’s protections.  That rule protects 6,477 acres of critical habitat  in Mississippi and Louisiana, including 1,600 privately owned acres of  unoccupied frog habitat in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana. The panel held that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife  Service reasonably concluded that the St. Tammany  Parish land is essential for recovery of the frogs, which are now  confined to just three sites in southern Mississippi — with only one site  regularly showing frog reproduction. The “friend of the court”  briefs, also known as “amicus briefs,” filed this week ask the Supreme Court to  affirm the panel decision. Volunteer lawyers and law students wrote the briefs,  in a coast-to-coast effort to represent scientists, legal experts and others with  economic, scientific, moral and aesthetic interests affected by this case: 
                            Landowners who value the presence of endangered species  on their property and welcome efforts to preserve their habitats;Faith-based groups recognizing a shared commitment, rooted  in religious teachings and principles, to care for the earth and its species;Scientists with expertise in conservation biology,  including Stuart Pimm and E.O. Wilson;Frog  experts who study amphibian ecology and have expertise in conservation of gopher  frogs;Leading  nonprofit conservation organizations with longstanding interests in protecting  wildlife;Environmental law professors with expertise in the Endangered Species  Act; Economists and law professors with expertise in economic theory,  cost-benefit analysis, the valuation of environmental goods and environmental  law and regulation; Former leaders of the Department of the  Interior, ranging from  the Nixon administration through the Obama administration, who administered and  enforced the Endangered Species Act; and Small-business  owners including ranchers, ecotourism entrepreneurs and artists, who make an economic  case for biodiversity and stewardship.  The Center  for Biological Diversity organized the amicus effort and, along with the Gulf  Restoration Network, intervened in the case. Participating as parties in the  litigation before the Supreme Court, the Center and GRN last week filed their brief in support of the frog’s habitat protections.  BackgroundThe dusky gopher frog (Rana sevosa) is a warty, dark-colored  frog with ridges on the sides of its back. When picked up, these frogs cover  their eyes with their forefeet, possibly to protect their faces until predators  taste their bitter skin secretions and release them. Gopher frogs spend most of  their lives underground in burrows created by gopher tortoises — hence their  name.
 Once prevalent in Louisiana,  Mississippi and Alabama, dusky gopher frogs are nearly extinct. More than 98  percent of longleaf pine forests — upon which the frog and many other rare  animals depend — have been destroyed. Fire suppression, drought, pesticides,  urban sprawl, highway construction and the decline of gopher tortoises have  made this frog so rare it now lives in only a few small Mississippi ponds, with  only one pond showing consistent frog reproduction.  In response to a Center  lawsuit, the Fish and Wildlife Service listed the gopher frog as a federally endangered  species in 2001. The lawsuit and advocacy by the Center also prompted the 2012 critical habitat designation at issue in the Supreme  Court case. Additionally, in response to legal advocacy by the Center and Gulf  Restoration Network, the agency released a final recovery plan for  the frogs in 2015.						   |