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by:ITATOUCH     2020-06-10
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BILLINGS, Mont. (AP)âx80x94 U. S.
On Friday, government lawyers filed a notice saying they were appealing a court ruling that prevented the first public hunting of grizzly bears in northern Rocky Mountains in decades.
The appeal challenged the judge's ruling, which restored threatened species protection to more than 700 bears inside and outside Yellowstone National Park.
The protection of these animals was canceled in 2017.
When a ruling from the United StatesS.
District Judge Dana kristenson fell on October, and Wyoming and Idaho are about to host their first public hunting event for grizzly bears under the age of 48 in the United States. S.
States since 1991.
Yellowstone federal biologist
The Grizzlies have fully recovered after decades.
The recovery work is very long.
They want to hand over animal management to the national wildlife agency, which says hunting is a way to better address the growing number of bear attacks on livestock.
But wildlife advocates and the Crow Indian tribe have successfully sued to prevent hunting.
Their lawyers have persuaded Chris Tenson that although Yellowstone bears have recovered, the species is still in danger elsewhere due to continued threats of climate change and habitat loss.
The population of Yellowstone National Park has recovered from the 136 animals that received federal protection in 1975.
In recent years, the Grizzlies have returned to many areas where they have been absent for decades.
This means more dangerous running.
Like a Hunting Guide in Wyoming, he was killed in a Grizzlies attack this fall.
The decision marks a second attempt by the government to lift the protection of the Yellowstone bear, but was overturned in court.
The agency announced in early 2007 the success of the Yellowstone National Park population recovery.
But a federal judge ordered the continued protection of wildlife, while wildlife officials looked at whether a reduction in white pine seeds, a major food source, would threaten the survival of bears.
Last year, the Fish and Wildlife Authority ended the work and addressed all other threats.
It was speculated that the agency would not appeal the latest ruling, but instead draft a new proposal to remove the animal from the threatened list.
According to the Powell Tribune, the agency's Grizzlies recovery coordinator raised the possibility at a meeting with Wyoming lawmakers last month.
Friday's appeal suggests that, for now at least, the battle over the Grizzlies will continue.
But Andrea Santaria of the Biodiversity Center, one of the plaintiffs in the previous case of kristenson, said the government could still choose to dismiss the case in the coming months.
"I think fish and wildlife should go back to the drawings and come up with a new plan to actually restore grizzly bears across the West, not piecemeal," she said . ".
Prior to the Ninth Circuit Court, the parties involved in the intervention on behalf of the Fish and Wildlife Service also appealed.
They include Idaho and Wyoming, as well as groups representing hunting interests, gun rights and agriculture.
Cody vitavski of the Mountain State Law Foundation said that if standing is allowed, the decision by Chris Tenson could make it more difficult for other species to be removed from the list of threatened and endangered species.
"Views like this have changed goals," he said . ". U. S.
Fish and Wildlife spokesperson Jennifer Strickland raised the issue with the Justice Department regarding the case, which did not providethe-record comment.
Follow Matthew Brown at AP 2018.
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