The Endangered Species Act at Thirty: Vol. 2: Conserving Biodiversity in Human-Dominated Landscapes

The Endangered Species Act at Thirty: Vol. 2: Conserving Biodiversity in Human-Dominated Landscapes

The Endangered Species Act at Thirty: Vol. 2: Conserving Biodiversity in Human-Dominated Landscapes

The Endangered Species Act at Thirty: Vol. 2: Conserving Biodiversity in Human-Dominated Landscapes

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Overview

A companion volume to The Endangered Species Act at Thirty: Renewing the Conservation Promise, this book examines the key policy tools available for protecting biodiversity in the United States by revisiting some basic questions in conservation: What are we trying to protect and why? What are the limits of species-based conservation? Can we develop new conservation strategies that are more ecologically and economically viable than past approaches?


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781597266017
Publisher: Island Press
Publication date: 03/19/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 376
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

J. Michael Scott is Professor, Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, University of Idaho, and Leader of the Idaho Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey.

Dale D. Goble is Margaret Wilson Schimke Distinguished Professor of Law, University of Idaho College of Law, Moscow, Idaho.

Frank Davis is Professor of Environmental Science and Management, Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara.

Read an Excerpt

The Endangered Species Act at Thirty

Vol. 2: Conserving Biodiversity in Human-Dominated Landscapes


By J. Michael Scott, Dale D. Goble, Frank W. Davis

ISLAND PRESS

Copyright © 2006 Island Press
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-59726-601-7



CHAPTER 1

Introduction

Frank W. Davis, J. Michael Scott, and Dale D. Goble


More than thirty years after its passage, the Endangered Species Act (ESA) of 1973 continues to be a cornerstone of U.S. biodiversity policy and among our most powerful environmental laws. The ESA set the nation's biodiversity conservation policy on a path that emphasized species-based conservation and triggered action only when a species faced imminent extinction. However, promoting recovery has proven more challenging than the original designers of the law anticipated. The number of listed species has mushroomed from 78 in 1973 to 1,267 in 2005, while in that time only 13 species have recovered sufficiently to be removed from the list (Scott et al. 2006).

As described in The Endangered Species Act at 30: Renewing the Conservation Promise, the act has proven remarkably durable in spite of nearly continuous political assaults and legal and scientific challenges (Goble et al. 2006). The contributing authors to that volume describe a variety of factors responsible for the act's endurance. Public support for species conservation has remained strong, especially for high-visibility species such as the bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) and grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) but also for less-charismatic taxa. The act has been championed by environmental groups in part for its power to control development, a role supported by a majority of the American public (Czech and Krausman 1997). Reforms have also been important to the act's continuance. In particular, implementation has evolved over the years from an absolute prohibition on take of endangered species to a more flexible permitting system, thereby defusing potentially explosive conservation conflicts on private lands. The act has also catalyzed administrative and legal reforms at all levels of government that have led to positive changes in natural resource management in rural areas and in urban open space planning.

The future viability of the Endangered Species Act, however, is uncertain. Over the next few decades the sheer magnitude of the conservation challenge will almost certainly defy species-by-species conservation (Woodwell 2002). We now live in a human-dominated world of a rapidly changing climate and increasingly biologically impoverished ecosystems (Millennium Ecosystem Assessment 2005a). As the conservation need grows, scientists have recommended putting more effort and resources toward protecting ecosystem services rather than simply preserving biodiversity for its own sake (Folke et al. 1996; Balvanera et al. 2001). This tension between investing in species for their intrinsic value versus their utility is likely to increase. The number of at-risk species in the United States is already five to ten times greater than the number of species currently protected under the ESA (Scott et al. 2006) and the gap will almost certainly continue to widen.

The cost of saving species must also be reevaluated. As our understanding of ecosystem dynamics and species requirements has improved, we see more clearly that our nature reserves are neither large enough nor represent environmental variation well enough to buffer species against continued habitat loss, degradation, or geographic displacement under climate change (Scott et al. 2001; Rosenzweig 2003a). Perhaps more to the point, many of the species at greatest risk are on private lands where political and economic costs of reserve-based species conservation are highest.

In other words, broad socioeconomic and environmental trends, combined with advances in conservation science, predict a rapidly widening gap between the goal of the Endangered Species Act, "to provide a means whereby the ecosystems upon which endangered species and threatened species depend, [and] to provide a program for the conservation of such endangered species and threatened species" (sec. 2(b)), versus what the law can actually deliver or what conservation scientists would argue is needed. For this reason, we believe an examination of the Endangered Species Act at thirty is not complete without revisiting some of the basic questions that pertain to U.S. policy for biodiversity conservation:

• What are we trying to protect and why?

• What are the limits of local species-based conservation for protecting biodiversity at multiple spatial scales and levels of organization?

• How can we conserve the biodiversity of the United States in increasingly human-dominated landscapes?

• Can we move beyond the tradition of biological reserves for rare and endangered species toward a conservation strategy that is more ecologically and economically viable?


The first volume, The Endangered Species Act at 30: Renewing the Conservation Promise, examined the implementation record, key actors and institutions, successes and failures, and opportunities to increase the act's effectiveness. This companion volume examines the four questions posed above in more detail, offering perspectives from environmental philosophers, conservation biologists, ecologists, and economists. Together the two books present a thorough examination of America's most powerful environmental law at a critical juncture in its history.

Chapters are organized into three parts: "Conservation Goals," "Conservation Science," and "Conservation Policy and Management." Chapters in the first part examine the historical and philosophical underpinnings of nature conservation in general and species conservation in particular. In the second part, biogeographers, geneticists, ecologists, and conservation biologists consider biodiversity conservation at multiple scales and levels of organization, the effectiveness of the Endangered Species Act in protecting different kinds of biodiversity, and ways of improving the role of science in its implementation. Chapters in the third part examine prospects for conserving biodiversity in human-dominated ecosystems from economic, ecological, and social perspectives. The emphasis is on conserving biodiversity on private lands outside of nature reserves in urban and agricultural landscapes. Several chapters explore new approaches such as conservation banks and markets for species and ecosystem services.

The chapters in this volume are more technical than those in the first volume and readers may find the juxtaposition of so many disciplines thought provoking. Their scope varies widely. Some chapters are broad and conceptual while others more narrowly focus on specific aspects of conservation science or policy. The underlying theme throughout, however, is that biodiversity conservation in human-dominated landscapes requires a different mindset than the view prevailing in 1973. At the time, it was thought that single-species conservation could be achieved by "cease-and-desist" orders and nature set-asides; instead, we find ourselves in an increasingly complicated world of multispecies- and ecosystem-based conservation over large landscapes, active adaptive management of nature, and dynamic biodiversity markets.

Despite the extraordinary challenge of biodiversity conservation in the twenty-first century, however, the authors are decidedly positive and pragmatic in their outlooks. We hope that the reader will find, as we have, that the forward-looking ideas and approaches presented here create a sense of excitement and renewed hope for restoring and maintaining the diversity of nature in America.

CHAPTER 2

Evolution of At-Risk Species Protection

Dale D. Goble


Wildlife conservation has historically employed two sets of tools. The first, "hook-and- bullet" game management, relies on take restrictions such as closed seasons and bag limits to maintain huntable populations; its use can be traced back nearly a millennium (Goble and Freyfogle 2002; Bean and Rowland 1997). The second, habitat protection, is equally ancient. Both the king in Parliament and colonial American legislatures routinely restricted land uses to conserve habitat (Goble and Freyfogle 2002; Hart 1996). The tools—take prohibitions and habitat protection—authorized by the Endangered Species Act (ESA) thus are familiar, but the act's objectives are not. Indeed, the notion that "saving all the pieces" is important is a change in perspective that remains intensely contested.

This chapter examines the evolution of wildlife conservation in the United States from game law to endangered species preservation, roughly divided into four overlapping periods. The first period lasted from the arrival of Europeans in North America to the rise of industrialism. The second was defined by the transformations produced by industrialization and the triumph of an unrestrained market. The third, from the end of the nineteenth century to the 1960s, was a reaction to the excesses of the market: conservationists sought reform by mandating scientific management of natural resources. The final period is the still-uncertain present. It began with the dramatic burst of federal legislation that transformed wildlife law—legislation that produced a corporate-fueled reaction.


The Myth of Abundance

The first stories from America were tales of exuberant bounty: Thomas Morton described a Massachusetts with "Fowles in abundance, Fish in multitude, and ... Millions of Turtledoves one the greene boughes: which sate pecking, of the full ripe pleasant grapes, that were supported by the lusty trees" (Morton 1637; Cronon 1983). Richard Whitbourne's description of the now-extinct great auk (Alca impennis), of its ability to "multiply so infinitly," and of God's gift of "the innocency of so poore a creature, to become such an admirable instrument for the sustenation of man" (Whitbourne 1620), captures two of the central precepts of the period: nature was both inexhaustibly fecund and created for the use of our species, and it was a continuously replenished storehouse. The innumerable flocks of passenger pigeons (Ectopistes migratorius) and the horizon-darkening herds of buffalo (Bison bison) made a mockery of restraint, and a policy of free access was simply assumed.

Experience soon demonstrated, however, that although wildlife might be abundant, it was not infinite. Massachusetts Bay adopted a closed season on deer in 1693; by the Revolution, every colony except Georgia had similar laws (Hynning 1939; Lund 1976). Colonial and state governments also regulated land uses to protect wildlife habitat (Goble and Freyfogle 2002; Hart 1996). The most common examples involve anadromous fish because of their importance to local communities. John Hart (2004), for example, has found that "[b]y 1800, thirteen states had laws prohibiting mill dams on some or all of their rivers from obstructing the passage of fish" (292). As the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court noted in one early decision contesting a requirement that the dam owner install fish passage facilities, "every owner of a water-mill or dam holds it ... under the limitation, that a sufficient and reasonable passageway shall be allowed for the fish" (Inhabitants of the Towns of Stoughton, Sharon, Canton v. Baker 1808, 528).

Industrialization brought dramatic change: the relatively static society of the early Republic with its emphasis on community (Novak 1996) was fundamentally transformed.


The Triumph of the Market

The common law allocated resources through property rules. One result was the protection of settled expectations; stability and continuity were dominant values. In colonial America, for example, access to fish was determined by long usage of fishing places (Carson v. Blazer 1810; Freary v. Cooke 1779; Pitkin v. Olmstead 1790). This understanding of "property" was swept away during the industrial transition between 1750 and 1850 (Horwitz 1977; Nelson 1975). Older communitarian restraints—the web of kin, community, and reciprocity—that supported an economic order based on a combination of subsistence, barter, communal labor, and limited markets, gave way to economic individualism, wage labor, and market dominance (Kulik 1985; Thompson 1985). Wildlife was often a victim of this transformation.

In the United States, industrialization began on the small rivers of New England, which were easily tapped for their waterpower. The owners of grist- and sawmills—the previous users of the waterpower—traditionally had been required to open their dams to permit passage of anadromous shad, salmon, and alewives to their upstream spawning grounds. Owners of the new blast furnaces opposed such requirements because the furnaces required a continuous supply of waterpower; they also opposed mandatory fishways because such facilities required spilling water and thus reduced production. Also, unlike mills, the furnaces (and the cotton mills that succeeded them) were market concerns that employed wage workers, produced commodities for regional, national, or international markets, and were owned by capitalists living outside the community. The result was conflict between competing visions of the public good, between the agrarian, communitarian economic order and the industrial, individualistic market-based relations (Hartley 1957; Steinberg 1991). Although the issue was not settled nationally until after the Civil War, the mill owners in New England set the precedent when they succeeded in changing both the pattern of river use and the laws protecting fish (e.g., McFarlin v. Essex Company 1852). In exempting dams from the requirement of fishways, legislators chose economic development and private gain; both farmers and fish lost.

This pattern repeated itself on increasingly larger scales in the post–Civil War period. Nature was simply a "resource" that existed to be exploited as rapidly as possible; judges and legislators reconstructed the law on the assumption that the land and its wealth were infinite and available for capture (Goble 1999; Hurst 1956). As Supreme Court Justice Stephen J. Field wrote, "[t]he wild bird in the air belongs to no one, but when the fowler brings it to earth and takes it into his possession it is his property.... So the trapper of the plains and the hunter of the north have a property in the furs they have gathered, though the animals from which they were taken roamed at large and belonged to no one" (Spring Valley Water Works v. Schottler 1884).

If this scramble to convert natural capital into private wealth led to the extirpation of the resource, it was accepted fatalistically (Martin 1879). Fatalism also describes the resignation greeting the destruction of wildlife habitat as a by-product of economic activities. In 1878, for example, the California Commissioners of Fisheries noted that "one-half of the streams in this State to which salmon formerly resorted for spawning, have, for this purpose been destroyed by mining. As mining is the more important industry, of course, for this evil there is no remedy" (Commissioners of Fisheries of the State of California 1878, 5).

By the last decade of the nineteenth century, the white pine forests of the upper Midwest had been turned into board feet; the herds of bison had been replaced with cattle (Flores 1980; Isenberg 2000); the once-uncountable flocks of passenger pigeons were gone (Halliday 1980; Schorger 1955). The 1890 census noted that the "unsettled" area had been broken into isolated fragments. Frederick Jackson Turner pondered the significance of the closing of the frontier in American history (Turner 1894) and Theodore Roosevelt nostalgically asserted that the destruction of the buffalo demonstrated that "the frontier had come to an end; it had vanished" (Roosevelt 1893, 12–13).

Progress had its costs.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Endangered Species Act at Thirty by J. Michael Scott, Dale D. Goble, Frank W. Davis. Copyright © 2006 Island Press. Excerpted by permission of ISLAND PRESS.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Preface
 
PART I. What Have We Protected?
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. By the Numbers
Chapter 3. Marine Species
Chapter 4. The Class of '67
Chapter 5. The Listing Record
Chapter 6. Congressional Politics
 
PART II. Achieving On-the-Ground Conservation
Chapter 7. Critical Habitat and Recovery
Chapter 8. The National Wildlife Refuge System
Chapter 9. Managing the Working Landscape
Chapter 10. The Dynamic Urban Landscape
Chapter 11. A Reality Check from Florida
Chapter 12. State Wildlife Diversity Programs
Chapter 13. County Conservation Planning
Chapter 14. Indian Tribes
Chapter 15. Nongovernmental Organizations
 
PART III. Prospects
Chapter 16. Lessons Learned
Chapter 17. Collaborative Decision Making
Chapter 18. Keys to Effective Conservation
Chapter 19. Hands-on Restoration
Chapter 20. Incentive Mechanisms
Chapter 21. Beyond Set-Asides
Chapter 22. Second-Generation Approaches
Chapter 23. Proactive Habitat Conservation
Chapter 24. Renewing the Conservation Commitment
 
Notes
References
Index
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