As the pygmy owl nears local extinction, community leaders vow to continue desert conservation
Tony Davis
ESA talks end in stalemate
While major disagreements remain, Pombo claims consensus
Reality Check
Misinformation, spin abound in endangered species debate
Critical Habitat: The Inside Story
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “High Noon for Habitat.” 1973 — Congress passes the original Endangered Species Act. Section 7 says that federal agencies must ensure that any federal action “doesn’t cause destruction or modification of habitat” that is deemed critical for a listed species. 1975 — The Fish […]
High Noon for Habitat
In Southern California, a host of imperiled wildlife lies in the path of America’s worst urban sprawl. The battle over the last patches of habitat is ringing through the halls of Washington, D.C.
Rangeland Revival
The Quivira Coalition prophesies a new era of peace and prosperity on the West’s rangelands, but is the group bold enough to make that vision real?
The ‘New Ranch’ poster child hangs on by a thread
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “Rangeland Revival.” Jim Williams steps out of his small, brown, wooden ranch house, and glances out over the shrub-dotted grasslands he has called home for all of his 61 years. Despite the pelting early-spring snow, the land looks sparse. Short and scraggly clumps of […]
Science: The chink in Quivira’s armor
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “Rangeland Revival.” Over and over, Quivira Coalition leaders have said that sustainable ranching is possible. But that claim isn’t backed up by a great deal of independent research. High Country News investigated rangeland science in southern Colorado and New Mexico, digging through the scientific […]
New grazing rules ride on doctored science
Veteran scientists leave the BLM in frustration
Developer under fire for destroying desert
A developer who was grading the desert for one of the largest developments in Arizona history now faces a lawsuit alleging major violations of state environmental laws. In February, the state attorney general’s office accused developer George Johnson and the five companies he owns of illegally destroying 40,203 native desert plants, bulldozing seven archaeological sites, […]
A Thirst for Growth
For decades, Sierra Vista, Arizona, has pumped groundwater like there’s no tomorrow. Now, to save the Southwest’s last free-flowing river, the city’s leaders must confront an age of limits.
Death of the San Pedro: Not if, but when
Note: this is a sidebar to a main story about the political struggles over protecting the San Pedro River. New evidence has surfaced that pumping in the Sierra Vista area may already be reducing groundwater flow to the San Pedro River. Water levels in seven monitoring wells on U.S. Army property have dropped by roughly […]
Arizona voters say ‘yes’ to open space
Unusual alliances — and a little bit of pork — give land preservation an economic boost
Cougar hunt creates uproar
Following a sensational search, Arizonar esidents push for tougher protections for mountain lions
Fires take toll on San Diego’s wildlife
Rare butterfly is likely extinct, while imperiled gnatcatcher loses a chunk of habitat
Biologist busted for moving endangered cacti
A darling of developers, consultant gets five years’ probation and $5,000 fine
Amid smoke and sprawl, some success
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “San Diego’s Habitat Triage.” It has taken six years for public officials in and around San Diego to acquire 30,000 acres of private land for a regional endangered species preserve. It took one week for almost 80 percent of that preserve to go up […]
San Diego’s Habitat Triage
To save room for a raft of imperiled species, one city is making sacrifices to the gods of sprawl. Not everyone thinks it’s going to be a happy ending
Behind the scenes, pressure and doubt
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “San Diego’s Habitat Triage.” The Center for Biological Diversity and its allies weren’t the only ones who found serious problems with the San Diego Multiple Species Conservation Program. Inside the Fish and Wildlife Service, two biologists, who have since left the agency, harbored private […]
Vernal pools fall to a shopping mall
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “San Diego’s Habitat Triage.” The first test of San Diego’s Multiple Species Conservation Program came little more than a year after it was passed. Cousins MarketCenters Inc. wanted to build a 453,000 square-foot shopping center and an apartment complex just north of downtown, on […]
