Leslie A. Dierauf, VMD
History: The Endangered Species Act (ESA) is the United States law:
that
determines when a species of animal or plant should be listed as threatened or endangered. This
listing process is Section 4 of the ESA and requires that all listings be based "solely on
the best scientific ...data available"
that
demands that whenever a Federal agency of the United States government wishes to undertake any
activity that might jeopardize any threatened or endangered species, that this so-called 'action
agency' consult with the FWS and come up with a list of "reasonable and prudent"
alternative actions that will diminish the impacts on the threatened or endangered species. This
is called a Section 7 consultation
that
provides "financial assistance" and "encouragement" to worldwide protection
and conservation of threatened and endangered species; these actions are meant to be "a
demonstration of the commitment of the United States"
that
controls trade (import and export) in threatened and endangered species in the United States,
through the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Flora and Fauna
(CITES)
that
provides monitoring of trade in non-threatened (or non-endangered) wildlife as well
that
designates United States import/export ports (in the U.S. these 9 designated ports are located
at Chicago, IL, Dallas-Fort Worth, TX, Honolulu, HI, Los Angeles, CA, Miami, FL, New Orleans,
LA, New York, NY, San Francisco, CA, and Seattle, WA, with 28 additional ports along the
Mexican-U.S.-Canadian borders)
that
assigns civil and criminal penalties to violations of the law (civil-- of no more than $25,000
per event; criminal-- fines of not more than $50,000 or imprisonment for up to 1 year)
The United States Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) within the U.S.
Department of the Interior (DOI), and the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) within the
U.S. Department of Commerce (DOC), make sure that the legal requirements of the ESA are met.
The strength of the ESA is that it is governed by SCIENCE not politics. The
ESA is also the implementing legislation for CITES, so that there will be no import or export of
endangered species except for scientific research or breeding purposes, and requires that
additional specific rules apply to import or export of threatened species as well.
The definition of "threatened" is a species which is "likely
to become endangered" in the near future throughout all or part of its range.
The definition of "endangered" is a species which is "in
danger of extinction" throughout all or part of its range (unless it is an insect species
that is considered a "pest"!).
CITES, the international wildlife treaty that has been signed to date by 112
countries worldwide, including every South American country. (Examples of countries not
yet signatories to CITES are: Angola, Bahrain, Barbados, Czechoslovakia, Fiji, Greece,
Iceland, Iraq, Jamaica, Korea, Lebanon, Libya, Singapore and Yugoslavia). For the 112 countries
that are parties to the Convention, CITES sets up separate and distinct permits for trade in any
wildlife or plant species listed in any of 3 Appendices:
Appendix I includes species threatened with extinction, which are affected
by trade. These species generally cannot be traded for commercial purposes. If species in
Appendix I are in non-commercial trade, they must move accompanied by an import permit from the
country receiving the species or species part and an export permit from the country moving the
species or species part out of its country.
Appendix II species are not yet threatened with extinction, but may become
so if trade is not controlled. These species may be traded commercially, but only with a permit
from the exporting country. If the species/species part/product moves to a second CITES country,
it will need a re-exporting permit from that country. If there are any species that look like
Appendix I species, but are not endangered by trade, they are called "look-alike"
species and traded under Appendix II rules.
Appendix III species are treated like Appendix II species and may be traded
it accompanied by certain permits. Species listed in this Appendix usually originate with any
participating CITES country which worries that a particular species within its own country may
soon be in trouble due to excess trade.
Permitting is complicated by additional participation by the U.S.
Customs Service within the Department of the Treasury, the Animal Plant and Health Inspection
Service, within the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which inspects exotic bird and plant
shipments, and the fact that the FWS and NMFS divide enforcement responsibilities under the
Marine Mammal Protection Act, which bans the take or import of marine mammals and their
products, but permits the use of marine mammals for scientific display and zoological
display.
The Lacey Act also comes into play. This law makes it an offense to violate
state, federal and foreign wildlife laws. Imports that violate the Lacey Act are considered
felonies and carry potential jail terms of 5 years and fines of up to $20,000. This law
prohibits:
illegal importation or exportation
illegal transportation
illegal selling, and
receiving, acquiring or purchasing of any fish, wildlife or plant, taken possessed
or transported or sold in violation of any law.
Signs and Symptoms
So which of these laws functions internationally?
The Lacey Act when it was written was meant to function nationally and
internationally and is clearly stated in its legislative language. The Lacey Act works
internationally.
The Endangered Species Act clearly states in its legislative language that
the Secretaries of Interior and Commerce through the Secretary of State are meant to encourage
international protection and conservation of threatened and endangered species world-wide.
The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species text recognizes
the beauty, irreplaceability, value and urgency of protecting certain species from
overexploitation from trade through international cooperation. CITES considers only species in
trade. And in general, Conventions are more "gentlemen's agreements", and enforcement
is difficult to impossible.
So whether threatened or endangered species are or can be protected or
conserved internationally comes down to the Endangered Species Act. Opinions on whether the ESA
should function internationally vary widely, and the rest of this discussion intends to focus on
just that subject, so perhaps we can all have a clearer understanding of the ESA and its
potential impacts on aquatic animals worldwide.
Diagnostics
Whenever we undertake a medical case, prior to diagnostics we have to ask
ourselves some questions.
*What
species are we most concerned with? I'll answer this one. Today I am going to dwell only on
aquatic animal species.
*What
are the threats to species worldwide with which we should be concerned? I'll answer that one
too. Human activities. I'll dwell on us later.
*Who
thinks that threatened or endangered species should be protected and conserved? Not everyone,
all the time. When economics or poverty come in to play, whether its economic exploitation of a
species, or fundamental and cultural overutilization of a species for survival, perspectives and
judgments can differ widely.
*
Should the United States use its legislative strong arm to protect and conserve species
worldwide? Should countries outside the U.S. use their own legislative controls to protect and
conserve species of concern to them? Should conservation practices adhered to at home, apply
abroad?
*
Simply because a country is lesser developed or has fewer economic resources, does it need or
want assistance? Are developed countries with greater economic resources capable of adequately
giving assistance?
The following activities threaten aquatic species worldwide, and we,
our human actions, are the problem worldwide --- trade, agriculture (logging, erosion,
siltation, nutrient overload, irrigation), agricultural run-off (pesticides, herbicides),
industrial waste, (sewage spills, heavy metals, synthetic organic chemicals), coastal or
estuarine habitat destruction (from construction, development, river modification, dams,
diversions, destruction of mangroves, wetlands, marshes, sea-grasses, erosion). But we, us
humans are also the solution worldwide. And in the end it really doesn't matter if it's our laws
or simply us that lead to protection and conservation, as long as our ultimate goals are indeed
protection and conservation, not exploitation and overutilization. Humans are capable of
thinking out approaches to treatment and recovery.
Some environmental groups argue that the United States is spending billions
of dollars worldwide to build dams, sewers, forest products plants, all of which endanger
wildlife and may be in violation of the ESA, since these Federal agencies are not consulting
with the FWS on any international actions that might impact threatened species abroad.
Let's look closely at a few of the cases of threat to aquatic species
worldwide before we consider actual treatments to affect a cure.
In India, the World Bank is financially backing a project on the Narmada
River that will provide water storage, irrigation and energy. However, the project is to be
comprised of 3,165 dams, will relocate 1.5 million people and will bury 254 villages and all the
habitat around them under water. Aquatic species expected to be impacted are mugger crocodiles,
pink-headed ducks, river terrapins and the Indian saw-back turtle.
In China, the United States Bureau of Land Management is considering an $11
billion, 607 foot tall dam project on China's longest River, the Yangtze (Jiang Yu). China is
concerned it doesn't have enough water and electricity to supply the needs of its citizens, nor
does it have the infrastructure for all the new tourists that arrive daily. The international
community argues that scores of exotic wildlife, including the white river dolphin, the Chinese
sturgeon and the Chinese alligator, will be harmed.
In St. Kitts, West Indies, the U.S. Agency for International Development is
funding a road construction project through steep and hilly terrain, and which will open 3800
acres of land in the coastal areas to development. Aquatic species anticipated to be affected
are hawksbill, green, leatherback and loggerhead sea turtles, the West Indian manatee, the
Caribbean monk seal and the Cuba sandhill crane.
To date the Secretary of the Interior has not interpreted Section 7 of the
ESA as requiring FWS consultation for international actions, and the State Department presumably
approves of this decision, since consultation would result in delays in funding of overseas
projects, and a slowing of financial aid internationally. However, a case on this exact issue
(Defenders of Wildlife v Luian) is to be heard by the United States Supreme Court this spring.
The outcome of that court case may decide the direction the ESA may take internationally in the
future.
In South America, the yacare caiman is well-known in the commercial
crocodile skin trade. This small crocodilian species is listed on Appendix II of CITES, which
allows its trade with proper permitting. However, because the yacare caiman is listed as
endangered under the U.S.'s domestic ESA legislation, which is a stricter law than CITES, the
yacare caiman or any product from it. is not allowed to be imported into the United States or
sold in Interstate commerce within the U.S.
In Palau, when there is a death in a family, a neighbor woman comes to the
home of the deceased to take care of the family during the weeks following the funeral. This
woman cooks, cleans, receives guests and keeps the home in order. In exchange for her services,
the woman receives toluk, or women's money, beautifully crafted dishes made from Hawksbill
turtle shell, which are dearly cherished.
Treatment
With these cases in mind, let's look at some of the innovative projects
working in the international arena to treat species of concern.
In Palau, the U.S. FWS is in the process of developing a barter system with
the artisans of that country in an attempt to balance the cultural needs of Palau with the
environmental concerns surrounding further depletion of hawksbill sea turtles. FWS is hoping to
supply the artisans in Palau with confiscated tortoise shell from its depositories, in exchange
for the Palauians agreeing to not kill turtles for shells any longer, and for the Palauians
agreeing to participate in educational programs teaching them how to artificially propagate the
sea turtle species of concern.
In Brazil, non-governmental organizations have developed a plan for
purchasing debts in exchange for environmental improvement covering such varied areas as
maintaining biodiversity, curbing urban development, using alternative sources of energy,
adopting sustainable use of natural resources, environmental education and environmental
institutions.
Environmental education and public awareness programs are coming in all
forms from very unlikely sources in these days of changes in attitudes towards wildlife and
aquatic animals, and the U.S. Forest Service has joined forces with state, local and private
entities, such as The Nature Conservancy, Ducks Unlimited, and Trout Unlimited to share the
costs of improving fish passages, migratory bird flyways and habitat improvement projects. In
the United States the Bureau of Land Management has a restoration program for wetlands
nationwide.
World Wildlife Fund has within its publications listings, translations of
many of the international wildlife laws now in existence worldwide. Conservation International
has compiled a listing of endangered ecosystems worldwide.
The National University in Costa Rica. has a U.S. FWS supported graduate
research program in endangered species of Latin America; projects include estimations of the
wild Crocodilian populations of Honduras, the biology, ecology and utilization of trout in a
Mexican Biosphere Reserve, and live births, imprinting, survival and habitat use by
black-bellied whistling ducks in Costa Rica. Local residents are learning the skills needed to
train other local residents in conservation efforts.
In Anniston, Alabama in the southern United States, a dwarf crocodile
handbag, an African sea turtle skin pocketbook, and cobra-skin shoes are on display, in the
first museum that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service hopes will educate the public on what items
are healthy and what items are not healthy to purchase abroad and try to bring back home. Every
item on display has been confiscated at one of the nine international ports, where wildlife
inspectors can confiscate traded products of threatened and endangered species. The FWS wants
the public to know that the burden of carrying such items back into the United States in on all
of us. It is not legal to possess eagle feathers in the United States, because they are a part
of an endangered species.
In Ashland, Oregon, in order to meet the needs of the U.S.'s native American
tribesmen and women who desire feathers for ceremonial dress and activities, a National Eagle
Repository has been set up, which supplies 800 native American requests a year for eagle
feathers and carcasses.
The importance of protecting habitats rather than simply single individual,
and highly visible, species becomes clearer every day. In urban areas of the world, where
development has been out of control, in order to allow wildlife free movement around developed
areas, and also to avoid any type of damaging human-wildlife interaction, the concept of
greenbelts, encircling the outskirts of cities, and marine estuarine reserves and sanctuaries,
are becoming commonplace.
Gap Analysis is a proactive tool for identifying important habitats,
ecosystems and species before they become endangered, so that those important areas can be
protected early on. Gap involves mapping, where transparencies are made of vegetation maps and
overlaid with animal distributions, which are further overlaid with federally or state owned and
managed land maps; thus showing where the "gaps" are, where lands need to be protected
for conservation of species and biological diversity, and also where lands may not be as
diverse, and thus able to be developed. The gap concept has not yet been adapted to aquatic
habitats, but certainly coastal and estuarine areas could be mapped in such a fashion. The more
we all start thinking about how to do such habitat mappings, the closer we will be to saving
species long before they ever are listed as threatened or endangered. Multiple species can be
saved all together in single bioregional areas, while economic development is also able to
proceed in areas of less biodiversity.
What can we all do to save the patients, these aquatic species that have
been, and continue to be our livelihood?
We
need to all think seriously about the habitat an aquatic species lives in. How does one legally
define an aquatic ecosystem, since it is constantly flowing, and species constantly migrate over
and around international boundaries in so doing
We
need to begin to collate data on overutilization from multiple uses
We
need to somehow design research that will teach us more about disease, predation and nutrition
of our aquatic species in the wild, including mortality rates
We
need to see where laws and regulations must be written, revised and/or strengthened, allowing
humans and aquatic species to coexist, both aesthetically and economically
We
need to cooperatively work with industry, local, state and federal entities to study, acquire
and manage habitats of importance to native aquatic species. Private land and water owners must
be provided incentives for protecting and conserving species within their properties
We
need to continually remind ourselves that we are at the same time both the problem and the
solution. Time is running out. Sound the alarm.
Prognosis
To that end, our treatment protocols should include the following:
Say
what you mean, and mean what you say.
Be
open to options; Listen; Be patient.
Adopt
a wide-angle point of view.
Educate anyone and everyone who will listen.
Stand
up for what you believe in, and back yourself up with science.
Be
always on the lookout for funding for you and your colleagues.
Always remember the ultimate goal is survival of all species.
If we stay true to ourselves and individually follow these goals
worldwide, the prognosis for recovery and survival will be good and continually getting
better.