July 31, 2015 CapitalPress.com 7 Judge clears barred owl removal study By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Killing barred owls to study the potential effects on threatened spotted owls does not violate federal environ- mental laws, according to a federal judge. Populations of the northern spotted owl, which is protect- ed under the Endangered Spe- cies Act, have continued to decline in recent decades de- spite strict limits on logging. Federal scientists believe the problem is partly due to the barred owl, a rival species that’s more adaptable, occu- pies similar habitats and com- petes for food. In 2013, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service authorized an experiment to remove 3,600 barred owls over four years, typically by shooting them, to see if spotted owl re- covery improves. Friends of Animals and Predator Defense, two animal rights groups, filed a com- plaint last year accusing the agency of violating the Na- tional Environmental Policy Act by failing to evaluate al- ternatives to lethal removal of barred owls. They also claimed the Fish and Wildlife Service’s study is contrary to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, under which the U.S. and other countries agreed to protect migratory birds. U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken has rejected these argu- ments, finding that the agency wasn’t obligated to undertake other “recovery actions” for the spotted owl that didn’t call for removal of barred owls. The agency took a suf- ficiently “hard look” at the study’s effects, including the possibility that it may disrupt an “equilibrium” between the two owl species in some ar- eas, Aiken said. The experiment also falls within an exception to the Mi- gratory Bird Treaty Act which permits birds to be killed for “scientific research or educa- tional purposes,” she said. From the Fish and Wild- life Service’s perspective, the judge’s opinion validates the significant amount of time AP Photo/The Herald, Barton Glasser, File A barred owl is shown in this 2004 file photo. A federal judge has approved an experiment in which barred owls will be killed to allow the northern spotted owl population to recover. and effort the agency spent studying the issue, said Robin Bown, biologist for the agen- cy. “I think we made our case,” she said. “We feel we did very inclusive work on this.” The plaintiffs are still un- decided whether to challenge Aiken’s ruling before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, said Michael Harris, director of Friends of Animals’ wild- said. “There is no evidence of any environment where spotted owls can outcompete barred owls,” Bown said. While the removal study costs $1 million a year, that includes costs related to the scientific analysis, she said. “When you’re doing a study, it costs more than op- erational activities,” she said. If removal proves effective at protecting spotted owls, other less-costly methods of controlling the barred owl’s population growth may be- come available in the future, Bown said. Seventy-one barred owls were removed during the first year of the study and 54 were removed during the second year, both at a site in Northern California. The Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice expects the removals to begin in at least two new sites in Oregon and Washington during the autumn of 2015. Data collected during the first two removal periods is insufficient to indicate wheth- er the removals are helping spotted owls, Bown said. “It’s hard to look for a trend with only two points.” California navel orange production meets expectations WSDA levies maximum fine for pesticides drifting over schools By TIM HEARDEN Capital Press Orchard workers failed to check weather conditions By DON JENKINS Capital Press An Eastern Washington man has been fined $7,500 for failing to keep pesticides from drifting over a Grant County school campus last spring, sickening three school employees, accord- ing to the Washington State De- partment of Agriculture. Ron Wyles, identified by WSDA as an orchard manager and a pesticide applicator for Ag Management Group of Yakima, also will have his applicator’s license suspended for 90 days. The fine and length of suspen- sion are the maximum penalties WSDA can levy. The case merited the sanc- tions because the pesticides drifted a considerable distance and endangered students, teach- ers and other school employees, according to WSDA. Wyles can appeal the penal- ty. Efforts to reach Wyles were unsuccessful. Ag Management Group declined to comment. Although Wyles was not in the orchard when the spraying occurred, he was responsible for the crew, which didn’t follow la- beling directions to ensure wind and atmospheric conditions were favorable, according to WSDA. According to the depart- ment’s investigation, Wyles or- dered a crew to start spraying at 4 a.m. March 19 in an apple orchard about 75 feet from the Wahluke School District cam- pus in Mattawa. At 7 a.m., the smell on campus was strong, a school employee said. The campus includes district offices, a high school, middle school and two elementary schools. That morning, 2,323 students and 281 teachers and staff members were on campus, according to WSDA. A teacher walking between the buildings developed a head- ache and felt nauseous. At 8:30 a.m., school employees went to the orchard and were told “the pesticide application was almost complete.” At 9 a.m., a teacher outside with children smelled the odor and had “a reaction,” according to the investigation. A school resource officer summoned fire and law enforcement officers to the orchard. By the time they arrived at around 10 a.m., the spraying was over. A fire offi- cial reported seeing “a cloud of spray over the top of the or- chard.” The Washington Department of Health reported that three school employees suffered mild stomach and breathing prob- lems. life law program. Habitat loss remains the primary culprit for the decline of spotted owls, he said. “The amount of old growth habitat hasn’t increased.” Spending millions of dol- lars by shooting barred owls in the Northwest year after year isn’t feasible but it is cru- el to the birds, Harris said. It’s possible that the two owl species will find niches and coexist over time, he said. Fish and Wildlife officials are rushing to judgment to blame barred owls to escape making tough decisions about forest management, Harris said. “You’re just taking a shortcut by scapegoating the barred owl.” The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service disagrees with this perspective. Biologists initially hoped the two species would be able to occupy different habitats, but the barred owl has con- sistently invaded the spot- ted owl’s territory since the 1970s, said Bown. As soon as the barred owl took over riparian areas, it “began marching up the hill- sides” to upland territory fa- vored by the spotted owl, she John O’Connell/Capital Press Mink peer from their cage at an eastern Idaho farm. Following the recent break-in of a Burley, Idaho, mink facility, the national trade organization for mink producers is urging mink farmers to step up secu- rity. The FBI recently arrested two suspects related to attacks on mink operations. Arrests made in mink farm attacks By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press SAN DIEGO — The FBI has arrested two animal-rights activists in connection with a series of 2013 attacks on mink farms in several states, includ- ing Idaho. Joseph Buddenberg, 31, and Nicole Kissane, 28, both of Oakland, Calif., were re- cently arrested on charges of conspiracy to violate the Ani- mal Enterprise Terrorism Act, according to an FBI press re- lease. The maximum penalty un- der the act is up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. They’ll likely face trial in the Southern District of Califor- nia, according to the press release. The suspects allegedly tar- geted animal farms in Idaho, Iowa, Minnesota, Pennsylva- nia and Montana, typically releasing mink and destroying breeding records. In Montana, they released a bobcat, and in San Diego, they vandalized a retail furrier, Furs by Graf, and vandalized the Spring Valley and La Mesa residenc- es and property of the current and former owners of the business. They also allegedly sought to flood the Wisconsin home of an employee with North American Fur Auctions. Cindy Moyle and her fam- ily, owners of a Heyburn, Ida- ho-based mink farm that the suspects allegedly attacked, watched as coyotes came down from the hills and car- ried off mink, said Michael Whelan, executive director with Fur Commission USA in Medford, Ore. Whelan said several other mink re- leased from the Moyle farm were struck by vehicles on the highway. The suspects allegedly posted details of their actions on an animal-rights website. Several FBI joint terror- ism task forces throughout the country reportedly contribut- ed to the arrests. “Whatever your feelings about the fur industry, there are legal ways to make your opinions known,” U.S. Attor- ney Laura Duffy said in the press release. Whelan believes investiga- tors increased their focus on the case after a U.S. district judge in Illinois upheld the An- imal Enterprise Terrorism Act. “Twenty years ago, they wouldn’t have pursued it at all,” Whelan said. “It goes to show we have the support of law enforcement, and people who commit crimes are go- ing to have to pay for their crimes.” According to a July 24 report by USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Ser- vice, both domestic mink prices and production are on an upswing. Production of pelts raised in 2014 for sale this year increased by 6 per- cent to 3.76 million pelts. The average price per pelt, at $57.70 was up $1.40 from the prior year. Idaho was the No. 3 mink producing state, with 345,590 pelts, trailing Wis- consin and Utah and ranking ahead of Oregon, which pro- duced 309,350 pelts. SACRAMENTO — As the season’s last navel oranges have left packing houses, pro- duction came close to match- ing the 79 million cartons forecast by an agency here, an industry insider says. Now growers are turning their attention to next season, for which the developing crop looks to be average or better, said Bob Blakely, vice presi- dent of the Exeter-based Cali- fornia Citrus Mutual. “It depends on who you talk to,” Blakely said. “Some growers are seeing a heavier crop and for some the crop is smaller.” The trees from which or- anges were harvested earlier in the season tend to have a better fruit set, while trees that still have fruit on them during the bloom don’t set as much because they’re still carrying a crop, he said. In any case, there’s been very little fruit drop this sum- mer, Blakely said. “The fruit that’s set seems to be holding, which would indicate it’s probably an aver- age to slightly better-than-av- erage crop,” he said. Packing houses are still to- taling production figures, but the National Agricultural Sta- tistics Service in Sacramento reported in July that this sea- son’s navel production would end up at 79 million cartons, or 1.58 million tons. That’s down 1 percent from the agency’s initial es- timate of a nearly 81 million carton crop but up 2 percent from last year’s production. Growers maintained a fresh-utilization rate of more than 80 percent through most of the season before rates fell into the 70s near the end. Or- anges not suitable for the fresh market are diverted to juice. The navel season wrapped up as the harvest of Valencia oranges will continue through the summer. NASS now ex- pects a 19 million carton crop, down 5 percent from its fore- cast earlier this year and down 11 percent from last year’s utilization. Valencia acreage has seen a precipitous decline in recent years as growers replace them with navels or other more lu- crative citrus varieties. There are about 34,000 bearing acres of Valencias this year, down from 65,000 in 2001- 02, according to NASS. Tim Hearden/Capital Press Valencia orange slices are served on a plate on a summer after- noon. As the Valencia orange harvest proceeds, the season’s last navel oranges have been shipped from packing houses. BUYING 6” and UP Alder, Maple, Cottonwood Saw Logs, Standing Timber www.cascadehardwood.com ROP-27-5-4/#24 Experiment intended to gauge impacts on spotted owl 31-4/#6