Perspectives on the landmark decision designating the northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) as a threatened subspecies |
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Authors: | Kathleen E Franzreb |
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Institution: | (1) Southeastern Forest Experiment Station Department of Forest Resources, Clemson University, 29634-1003 Clemson, South Carolina, USA |
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Abstract: | Following an extensive legal battle challenging its original decision to not extend the protection of the Endangered Species
Act to the northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina), the US Fish and Wildlife Service was ordered by the 9th District Court of Appeals to reassess the status of the owl. As
a result of the revised analysis, the service proposed the northern spotted owl for threatened status throughout its range.
Because of the complex biological issues involved and the perceived potential for economic disruption in timber-dependent
communities of the Pacific Northwest, this proposal generated more controversy and interest than any previous one. In this
article I discuss the rationale for the service’s decision, public involvement in the process, and the mechanisms now available
to conserve the northern spotted owl and its habitat under the Endangered Species Act. |
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Keywords: | Northern spotted owl Threatened subspecies Logging Pacific Northwest Old growth |
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