July 29, 2016 CapitalPress.com WDFW: Bald eagles soar, can come off state list Peregrine falcons doing well, too By DON JENKINS Capital Press The bald eagle has made an “incredible recovery,” ac- cording to a Washington De- partment of Fish and Wildlife report, which recommends removing the national bird from the list of state-protected species. “It’s really exciting to be able to celebrate a con- servation success because they are sometimes few and far between,” said Hannah Anderson, WDFW’s listing and recovery section man- ager. A change in state status wouldn’t lift federal restric- tions on activities near nests. The species would still be protected by the Bald and Golden Eagle Act. The change in state status, however, would highlight the recovery in Washington of an American icon. WDFW’s report credits the banning of some chemicals, including DDT in 1972, for the bird’s rebound. As apex predators, bald eagles ingest toxins absorbed by their prey. Courtesy of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service A Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife report has recom- mended removing the bald eagle from the state’s endangered species list. The bald eagle would still be protected by federal law. “The bald eagle popu- lation both in Washington and throughout most of its range has clearly recovered,” states the report, released this month. “The Washington pop- ulation is robust and all indi- cations are that the species will continue to be an import- ant and thriving part of our state’s natural diversity for the foreseeable future.” WDFW is taking public comment on the status of the bald eagle and four other spe- cies. WDFW oficials also are recommending that peregrine falcons be removed from the state-protected list and that American white pelicans be upgraded to threatened from endangered. Both species are protected by the federal Mi- gratory Bird Treaty Act. Also, WDFW oficials are recommending the statuses of the marbled murrelet and the lynx be changed to endan- gered from threatened. Both species already are protected by the federal Endangered Species Act. The bald eagle was listed under the ESA in 1978 and delisted in 2007. It’s still il- legal to disturb bald eagles except under circumstances approved by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. As of 2015, bald eagles were known to have occu- pied 1,334 sites in Washing- ton, according to WDFW. It’s unknown how many of those sites have been recently occu- pied. DDT also was blamed for a dramatic decline in the pop- ulation of peregrine falcons nationally. The falcons were federally listed in 1970 and delisted in 1999. Washington’s population of peregrine falcons has been increasing since 1990, ac- cording to WDFW. In 2009, WDFW found peregrine fal- cons occupying 108 sites, up from 91 in 2006. Washington’s only colony of American white pelicans nest on Badger Island in the Columbia River, near the Snake River junction. The population has in- creased substantially in the last 30 years, according to WDFW. Some 3,267 breeding adults were counted in 2015. Marbled murrelets were federally listed in 1992 and listed by the state in 1993. Nevertheless, Washington’s population has declined by about 44 percent over the past 15 years, according to WDFW. The report cites the loss of forest habitat, decline in ish prey and the bird’s low repro- ductive rate for the decline. WDFW estimates 54 lynx are in western Okanogan County, the only area in the state with a lynx population. The cat’s population has not improved since it was listed as a state-protected species in 1993 or federally in 2000, ac- cording to WDFW. Changing the status of lynx to endangered from threatened could focus more attention on conservation ef- forts, according to WDFW. WDFW will take com- ments on the proposed chang- es until Oct. 10. Comments may be submitted by email to TandEpubliccom@dfw. wa.gov or by mail to Hannah Anderson, Washington De- partment of Fish and Wildlife, 600 Capitol Way N., Olym- pia, WA 98501-1091. The Fish and Wildlife Commission is tentatively scheduled to discuss the rec- ommendations in November. Washington lists 45 spe- cies of ish and wildlife as sensitive, threatened or en- dangered. “We care about main- taining these populations within our state,” Anderson said. Wyden: Obama administration well aware of opposition to monument By SEAN ELLIS Capital Press Sean Ellis/Capital Press Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., speaks to Malheur County resi- dents during a July 21 town hall meeting. Wyden said he has made it clear to the Obama ad- ministration that local residents strongly oppose designating a national monument in the county. ONTARIO, Ore. — The Obama administration is well aware of the strong local op- position to a proposed na- tional monument in Malheur County, U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden told Eastern Oregon residents on July 21. Malheur County residents who asked Wyden during an annual town hall meeting whether he supports the pro- posed national monument said they didn’t receive a dei- nite answer. But Wyden did say several times that the president knows of the local opposition to the proposed national monument on 2.5 million acres in a part of the county known as the Owyhee Canyonlands. “I have told the Obama administration repeatedly ... that there is very vigorous op- position at the local level to the monument,” the Oregon Democrat said. “They would have had no confusion about what I’m telling them.” Supporters want Obama to use the Antiquities Act to de- clare a national monument in Malheur County. Ranchers and others who asked Wyden whether he sup- ports the national monument proposal being pushed by the Oregon Natural Desert Asso- ciation told Capital Press lat- er they didn’t receive a clear answer. Malheur County Farm Bureau President Jeana Hall asked Wyden for a commit- ment to “stand up for the peo- ple of Oregon, not just here in Malheur, and say that there should not be a monument designation.” Julie Mackenzie, a Jor- dan Valley rancher, asked Wyden, “Are you for the monument?” Wyden said it’s his duty to respect how Oregon resi- dents vote on issues. Malheur County residents voted 9-1 against the monument in a special election in March. He also said that while Malheur County residents have voted on the issue, the rest of Ore- gon has not. “I didn’t hear an answer,” Hall told Capital Press later. “I think I heard a ‘maybe’ somewhere in there.” Mackenzie said she asked the senator “a yes or no ques- tion and he didn’t answer it. It was just kind of a go- ing around in circles type of thing.” Wyden Press Secretary Hank Stern said he would let the senator’s words during the meeting speak for them- selves but added, “I thought he expressed himself pretty clearly.” 11 Vandals use ireworks to spook goats By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Vandals recently set off ireworks and took down part of a fence in releasing about 240 goats near Issaquah, Wash. Craig Madsen, of Edwall, Wash., contracts his goats for weed and brush control with the Issaquah Highlands Homeowner Association, a village of roughly 1,000 homes about 20 miles east of Seattle. At about 10:45 p.m. July 17, Madsen was talking on the phone with his wife, Sue Lani Madsen, when he heard ireworks. He checked on the goats and found they has got- ten outside the fence, so he got his dog and rounded them up. Several neighbors called the Issaquah police. Luckily, Madsen said, most of the goats did not wander into a nearby area with landscaping and plants that are poisonous to goats, although one young goat ap- peared to be recovering from eating rhododendrons and azaleas. Most of the goats had wan- dered into a wooded area and were herded back into the pen, Madsen said. Someone had turned off the electric fence by discon- necting the energizer from the battery and used the ireworks to spook the animals, he said. “They’d planned it,” he said. Madsen said a neighbor noticed several teenagers try- ing to steal a goat the next night. She called the police and the teenagers were spo- ken to. Madsen doesn’t know if those teenagers also set off the ireworks the night before. Madsen said it is rare for anyone to hassle his goats. “It does happen — I mean, it’s rare,” he said. Madsen blames most peo- ple’s lack of a farming back- ground in today’s society. 31-1/#4N