April 20, 2018 CapitalPress.com 7 Washington butterfly up for ESA protection Losing farmland hurt species By DON JENKINS Capital Press A species of butterfly found on the end of one Wash- ington state island doesn’t fare well around agriculture, but apparently fares even worse when farmland yields to development, according to a report by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The agency proposed Tues- day to list the island marble butterfly as an endangered species. Fish and Wildlife last year counted fewer than 200 on the southern end of San Juan Island, mostly on Amer- ican Camp, a 19th century Army post that’s now part of the San Juan National Historic Park. To conserve the species, Fish and Wildlife also propos- es to designate 812 acres as critical habitat. The butterfly is not known to occupy other areas, but endangered species are protected wherever they appear. The National Park Ser- vice is the largest landowner, with 718 acres. Two acres are privately owned, while other federal, state or local agencies own the rest. The privately owned land is primarily steep U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service The island marble butterfly, found only on San Juan Island in Washington, is a candidate for the endangered species list. A U.S. Fish and Wildlife report says loss of farmland has shrunk the butterfly’s range. coastal bluffs, a Fish and Wild- life spokeswoman said. More than a decade ago, according to Fish and Wild- life, the butterfly was found in pockets away from the camp on small farms and in rural neigh- borhoods. Livestock and tilling take out the mustard plants that host the butterflies, yet the agency said it believed the land’s use was compatible with the species. “Since that time, the amount of farmland in San Juan County has decreased, with the greatest loss of farmland in San Juan County attributed to the sub- division of larger farms into smaller parcels, which have been developed,” according to Fish and Wildlife. “We conclude that devel- opment has substantively con- tributed to the extirpation of the island marble butterfly outside of American Camp and remains one of several factors impeding successful recolonization of previously occupied habitats.” The species was once known on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, across the Haro Strait from San Juan Is- land. The butterfly had not been seen for 90 years until a Washington Department of Natural Resources biologist spotted one in 1998. The Xerces Society for In- vertebrate Conservation and other environmental groups first petitioned Fish and Wild- life to list the species in 2002. Xerces renewed the petition in 2012. “There has been tremen- dous effort to assist the is- land marble butterfly over the years,” Fish and Wildlife’s state supervisor, Erick Rick- erson, said in a written state- ment. “But given the small population size, the threats to this species are significant. We will continue to work collab- oratively with organizations and individuals on San Juan Island in our shared concern for the continued survival of this species.” Top threats identified by Fish and Wildlife include pre- dation by spiders and wasps. Deer, rabbits and snails browse on plants that host butterflies, and storms have swamped habitat. Potential, though undocu- mented, threats include but- terfly collectors and vehicle collisions. Male island marble but- terflies are attracted to white objects that resemble fe- males. The butterflies could be attracted to the white fog lines of the highway through American Camp and increase their risk of being hit, accord- ing to the Fish and Wildlife report. Fish and Wildlife will take public comments on the pro- posed listing through June 11. Comments may be submit- ted to www.regulations.gov or mailed to: Eric V. Rickerson, state supervisor, Washington Fish and Wildlife Office, 510 Desmond Drive SE, Lacey, Wash., 98506. Baker & Murakami combination finds new efficiencies By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press A merged, automated and otherwise fine-tuned Baker & Murakami Produce heads into the home stretch of the North- west onion marketing season bullish on its position in the industry. Baker Packing Co. and Murakami Produce, both of Ontario, Ore., on July 1 took equal ownership in the new Baker & Murakami Pro- duce Co. LLP. The company grows, packs and ships onions supplied to a full range of cus- tomers including foodservice, retail and food-processing segments. “We have built a lot of momentum this year and we are in a very good position moving forward,” Baker & Murakami Chief Operat- ing Officer Cameron Skeen said. Combining two longtime Ontario businesses into one included substantial auto- mation that streamlined op- erations and positioned the post-merger company to more effectively deal with the tight labor market, he said. Auto- mation also led to better qual- ity control. Innovation in agriculture is positive at county, state and national levels, said Malheur County Economic Develop- ment Corp. Director Greg Smith, who is based in On- tario. “While there may be short- term reductions in employ- ment, it does lead to greater Baker & Murakami Produce Onions travel to an automated weigher and bagger. stability and profitability for the industry,” Smith said. The former Baker Packing location at 153 S.E. First St. houses packing operations and the sales office. The for- mer Murakami Produce fa- cility includes the business office, and field and storage operations. Following the merger and integration of the two large companies, Baker & Muraka- mi has the same broad cus- tomer base but is more effi- cient and competitive, Skeen said. The company has better technology and more in-depth quality control that helps put a better onion in the hands of customers, he said. “Our grading capabilities are much more extensive and sophisticated,” Skeen said. The new grading equipment evaluates characteristics of the inside and outside of an onion, and sorts by character- istics including color. The au- tomated system also weighs, sizes and bags onions, and places them on pallets. Automation and other in- ternal changes helped Baker & Murakami streamline its workforce and in turn help the company deal with a per- sistent labor shortage. Skeen did not release pre-merger or current em- ployee totals. He said the merged company runs a sin- gle shift as the two indepen- dent predecessors each did. Employees added skills as Baker & Murakami moved ahead with new systems and processes. Automation is the wave of the future, he said, and “we are trying to push ourselves for long-term success.” It hasn’t been easy. “This year has been a real learning curve with a lot of moving parts putting two companies together,” Skeen said. The united company found the right operating structure, and the right equip- ment, to change and improve upon what the predecessor enterprises did for years, he said. “It has been challenging in that regard, but at the same time we feel like we are ahead of where we thought we would be,” Skeen said. “I feel like we are definitely ahead of the curve for our area.” Southeastern Oregon and southwestern Idaho field near- ly 30 onion packing and ship- ping companies, he said. The Northwest marketing season, during which onions go from growers and packer-shippers to customers, typically ends in May. Idaho Department of Fish and Game The Northern Idaho Ground Squirrel. The threatened species represents a potential roadblock to raising an Idaho dam and expanding its reservoir. Threatened ground squirrel may impact dam project By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press Water users want to raise Lost Valley Dam 130 miles north of Boise and triple the capacity of its reservoir to 30,000 acre-feet, but a threat- ened squirrel’s presence near- by could impede or even de- rail those plans. The Idaho Water Resource Board has approved spend- ing up to $30,000 to study mitigation options for the dam expansion’s impact on the Northern Idaho Ground Squirrel. Lost Valley Reservoir Co. board member Doug McAl- vain said the proposed expan- sion could be halted if popu- lation surveys and a related analysis don’t produce viable mitigation steps for the squir- rel. Loss of its meadow hab- itat remains the biggest chal- lenge for the Northern Idaho Ground Squirrel, which was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act 18 years ago. A 2003 Federal Register entry said the main threat to the Northern Idaho Ground Squirrel is habitat loss as forests encroach on former- ly suitable meadows, cutting off movement corridors and confining populations to iso- lated “habitat islands” that can reduce survival rates. A U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service spe- cies profile said fire suppres- sion is thought to be a factor in habitat loss. Fish & Wildlife said the squirrel ranges from Adams and Valley counties in Ida- ho’s west-central mountain communities and south into Washington County. Popu- lations have been found near New Meadows, Lost Valley Reservoir and other nearby locations. An estimated 54 population sites contain a combined 1,500 to 2,200 indi- vidual squirrels. Range-wide monitoring shows known populations sta- ble to slightly increasing over time, though the species’ re- covery status remains unclear, the agency said. Biologists found several new population sites as well as indications the squirrel responds favorably to habitat-restoration efforts at certain locations, especially in the Payette National Forest. Miel Corbett, U.S. Fish & Wildlife regional spokeswom- an in Portland, said the agency in 2016 initiated a five-year review that will evaluate the recovery status of the North- ern Idaho Ground Squirrel. Recovery efforts emphasize restoring meadow habitat and providing connections be- tween existing populations, she said. The species inhabits dry meadows surrounded by Pon- derosa pine and Douglas fir trees, at elevations from 1,500 to 7,500 square feet, Fish & Wildlife said. These squirrels need large amounts of grass seed, stems and other green, leafy vegetation to store fat reserves during hibernation from August or early Septem- ber to late April or early May. The Idaho Department of Fish and Game office in McCall in December and January advertised up to four jobs monitoring populations of the threatened squirrel in the state’s west central region from April 9 to July 20. The job announcement said work- ers will measure distances between populations and note intersections among point-to- point connections. They also may mark squirrels for future recapture and study. IDFG has been part of the interagency group carrying out the recovery plan since the outset, said Diane Evans Mack, regional wildlife biol- ogist based in McCall. The department monitors squirrel populations, through surveys and other means, to derive annual estimates across the animal’s range. Collectively the population data help paint a long-term picture, she said. ‘Crooked calf’ lawsuit seeks $376,000 in damages By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Ranches in Nebraska and Idaho are seeking $376,000 in a lawsuit that accuses an Oregon cattle company of negligence that resulted in deformed calves. The complaint claims that Riverside Ranch Cattle and affiliated bovine repro- duction companies in Prairie City, Ore., sold cows that had consumed toxic lupine plants while pregnant. Those “recipient cows” had been implanted with em- bryos from Hoffman Ranch in Nebraska and Colyer Her- efords in Idaho, which later bought the pregnant animals from the Oregon company. The arrangement was part of an “embryo transfer,” which allows cows with elite genetics to more quickly pro- duce multiple offspring. Under this process, hor- mone treatments cause a cow’s ovaries to generate several eggs at the same time, which are then fertilized with sperm. The resulting embry- os are then “flushed” from its uterus and implanted into other cows that serve as sur- rogate mothers. In this case, the plain- tiffs allege that recipient cows were exposed to lupine during a critical point of their pregnancy while under the care of Riverside Ranch Cat- tle in the spring or summer of 2015 and 2016. Alkaloids in lupine plants caused 23 of the 40 recipient cows bought by Hoffman Ranch to give birth to calves with defects such as crooked legs and malformed spines in 2015, according to the complaint. The lawsuit alleges that lupine consumption similar- ly caused “crooked calf syn- drome” in 45 of the 64 recip- ient cows bought by Colyer Herefords in 2016. The plaintiffs claim that 22 calves died or had to be euthanized due to the syn- drome. Riverside Ranch Cattle was negligent in failing to prevent the recipient cows from eating the lupines, re- sulting in a breach of con- tract, the complaint said. 16-4/106 16-4/100