Difference between revisions of "EXTIRPATED"

From Glen Canyon Dam AMP
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 107: Line 107:
 
*[https://www.usbr.gov/uc/rm/amp/twg/mtgs/11mar08/Attach_07.pdf Goal 3, Extirpated Species Ad Hoc Group Report]
 
*[https://www.usbr.gov/uc/rm/amp/twg/mtgs/11mar08/Attach_07.pdf Goal 3, Extirpated Species Ad Hoc Group Report]
 
*[https://www.usbr.gov/uc/rm/amp/twg/mtgs/10nov15/Attach_04.pdf Grand Canyon Wildlands Council White Paper: Extirpated Species in the Colorado River Ecosystem March 25, 2009. The Status, Ecological Role, and Potential for Reintroduction of Species Extirpated from the Colorado River Ecosystem, Glen and Grand Canyons, Arizona]
 
*[https://www.usbr.gov/uc/rm/amp/twg/mtgs/10nov15/Attach_04.pdf Grand Canyon Wildlands Council White Paper: Extirpated Species in the Colorado River Ecosystem March 25, 2009. The Status, Ecological Role, and Potential for Reintroduction of Species Extirpated from the Colorado River Ecosystem, Glen and Grand Canyons, Arizona]
 +
*[https://www.usbr.gov/uc/rm/amp/amwg/mtgs/09aug12/Attach_18.pdf Ecological Role, and Potential for Reintroduction of Species Extirpated from the Colorado River Ecosystem, Glen and Grand Canyons, Arizona; Draft Executive Summary dated March 15, 2009, by Grand Canyon Wildlands Council and corresponding PPT]
  
 
|-
 
|-

Revision as of 11:27, 9 July 2018


Colorado River Otter- EP- PIC.jpg

Extirpated Species

At least 14, to more than 23 animal species that existed or regularly bred in the CRE have been extirpated, with only two of those extirpations occurring prior to the closure of Glen Canyon Dam in 1963 (California condor - Gymnogyps californianus, and gray wolf - Canis lupus youngi; Table 2; Appendix A). TMC known to have been extirpated include: 4 fish (Colorado pikeminnow – Pychocheilus lucius, razorback sucker – Xyrauchen texanus, and bonytail and roundtail chub – Gila elegans and G. robusta, respectively), 2 amphibians (Lithobates pipiens and L. nr. yavapaiensis), zebra-tailed lizard, 4 birds (breeding southwestern willow flycatcher – Empidonax trailii extimus; western yellow-billed cuckoo - Coccyzus americanus occidentalis, Gambel’s quail - Callipepla gambelii, and California condor, which was reintroduced outside the CRE in 1996); and 3 mammals (badger – Taxodea taxa; the likely extinct southwestern river otter – Lutra canadensis sonora; and gray wolf, which was extirpated from northern Arizona prior to 1946). The status of several apparently rare herpetofauna (e.g., regal ring-necked snake – Diadophis punctatus regalis, western threadsnake – Leptotyphlops humilis, other snakes), as well as numerous rare plant and invertebrate taxa, remains unknown. [1]

Desired Future Condition for Extirpated Species

Re-establish fishes extirpated from Grand Canyon, where feasible and consistent with recovery goals for humpback chub and the recovery goals of those extirpated fishes.

---
---
---

Updates

Colorado Pikeminnow

Bonytail Chub

Roundtail Chub

Lowland Leopard Frog

Northern Leopard Frog

Southwestern Willow Flycatcher

Western Yellow-billed Cuckoo

Plains Gray Wolf

Colorado River Otter

Colorado River Otter- EP- PIC.jpg

Extirpated Species- Archieve

Links

Presentations and Papers

Other Stuff

  • The 2009 park profile for Grand Canyon National Park prepared by the National Park Service lists the following species as extirpated: grizzly bear, black-footed ferret, gray wolf, jaguar, Bear Valley sandwort, Colorado pikeminnow, bonytail, roundtail chub, and northern leopard frog.
  • The CFMP-EA does not propose management actions to reintroduce extirpated species to the project area; however, reintroduction feasibility studies conducted over the life of the plan would undergo subsequest NEPA analysis. (NPS CFMP-EA_pg59)
  • How close is close enough for gray wolf recovery? It's Interior's call
  • Colorado River Toad Page