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Proposed Rule

Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; 90-Day Finding on Two Petitions for Gray Wolf

Notification of petition finding.

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Summary:

We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), announce a 90-day finding on two concurrently filed companion petitions to revise the currently listed gray wolf (Canis lupus) entities under the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act or ESA). Together, the petitions requested that the Service: designate and delist a Western Great Lakes (WGL) distinct population segment (DPS) of gray wolf due to recovery; and designate a West Coast States DPS of gray wolf and list it as a threatened species, and potentially delist the remnant areas of the gray wolf entity in the lower 48 States due to extinction. Based on our review, we find that the petitions do not present substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that the petitioned actions may be warranted.

Key Dates
Citation: 90 FR 1419
This finding was made on January 8, 2025.
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Document Details

Document Number2024-31754
FR Citation90 FR 1419
TypeProposed Rule
PublishedJan 8, 2025
Effective Date-
RIN-
Docket IDDocket No. FWS-HQ-ES-2024-0187
Pages1419–1421 (3 pages)
Text FetchedYes

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Full Document Text (2,217 words · ~12 min read)

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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR <SUBAGY>Fish and Wildlife Service</SUBAGY> <CFR>50 CFR Part 17</CFR> <DEPDOC>[Docket No. FWS-HQ-ES-2024-0187; FXES1113090FEDR-256-FF09E21000]</DEPDOC> <SUBJECT>Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; 90-Day Finding on Two Petitions for Gray Wolf</SUBJECT> <HD SOURCE="HED">AGENCY:</HD> Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior. <HD SOURCE="HED">ACTION:</HD> Notification of petition finding. <SUM> <HD SOURCE="HED">SUMMARY:</HD> We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), announce a 90-day finding on two concurrently filed companion petitions to revise the currently listed gray wolf ( <E T="03">Canis lupus</E> ) entities under the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act or ESA). Together, the petitions requested that the Service: designate and delist a Western Great Lakes (WGL) distinct population segment (DPS) of gray wolf due to recovery; and designate a West Coast States DPS of gray wolf and list it as a threatened species, and potentially delist the remnant areas of the gray wolf entity in the lower 48 States due to extinction. Based on our review, we find that the petitions do not present substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that the petitioned actions may be warranted. </SUM> <EFFDATE> <HD SOURCE="HED">DATES:</HD> This finding was made on January 8, 2025. </EFFDATE> <HD SOURCE="HED">ADDRESSES:</HD> <E T="03">Supporting documents:</E> A summary of the basis for the petition finding contained in this document is available on <E T="03">https://www.regulations.gov</E> in Docket No. FWS-HQ-ES-2024-0187. In addition, this supporting information is available by contacting the appropriate person, as specified in <E T="02">FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT</E> . <FURINF> <HD SOURCE="HED">FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:</HD> Rachel London, Manager, Branch of Delisting and Foreign Species, Ecological Services Headquarters; telephone: 703-358-2491; email: <E T="03">rachel_london@fws.gov.</E> Individuals in the United States who are deaf, deafblind, hard of hearing, or have a speech disability may dial 711 (TTY, TDD, or TeleBraille) to access telecommunications relay services. Individuals outside the United States should use the relay services offered within their country to make international calls to the point-of-contact in the United States. </FURINF> <SUPLINF> <HD SOURCE="HED"> SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: </HD> <HD SOURCE="HD1">Background</HD> Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533) and its implementing regulations in title 50 of the Code of Federal Regulations (50 CFR part 424) set forth the procedures for adding species to, removing species from, or reclassifying species on the Federal Lists of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants (Lists or List) in 50 CFR part 17. Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Act requires that we make a finding on whether a petition to add a species to the List ( <E T="03">i.e.,</E> “list” a species), remove a species from the List ( <E T="03">i.e.,</E> “delist” a species), or change a listed species' status from endangered to threatened or from threatened to endangered ( <E T="03">i.e.,</E> “reclassify” a species) presents substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted. To the maximum extent practicable, we are to make this finding within 90 days of our receipt of the petition and publish the finding promptly in the <E T="04">Federal Register</E> . Our regulations establish that substantial scientific or commercial information with regard to a 90-day petition finding refers to credible scientific or commercial information in support of the petition's claims such that a reasonable person conducting an impartial scientific review would conclude that the action proposed in the petition may be warranted (50 CFR 424.14(h)(1)(i)). A positive 90-day petition finding does not indicate that the petitioned action is warranted; the finding indicates only that the petitioned action may be warranted and that a full review should occur. When evaluating a petition, we must also consider whether the petitioned entity may be a listable entity under the Act, <E T="03">i.e.,</E> a species, a subspecies, or a potential distinct population segment (DPS) of a vertebrate species or subspecies. The evaluation of the taxonomic status of a species or subspecies or the validity of a potential DPS centers on whether the information presented in the petition reaches the substantial information threshold. It is not within our purview to determine taxonomic status or DPS validity in a 90-day petition evaluation; rather, we evaluate information submitted by the petitioners to determine whether the information indicates the petitioned entity may be a listable entity under the Act. We will not expand the scope of our evaluation beyond the petitioned entities, including various combinations of DPSs. A species may be determined to be an endangered species or a threatened species because of one or more of the five factors described in section 4(a)(1) of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533(a)(1)). The five factors are: (a) The present or threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of its habitat or range (Factor A); (b) Overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific, or educational purposes (Factor B); (c) Disease or predation (Factor C); (d) The inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms (Factor D); and (e) Other natural or manmade factors affecting its continued existence (Factor E). <FP>These factors represent broad categories of natural or human-caused actions or conditions that could have an effect on a species' continued existence. In evaluating these actions and conditions, we look for those that may have a negative effect on individuals of the species, as well as other actions or conditions that may ameliorate any negative effects or may have positive effects.</FP> We use the term “threat” to refer in general to actions or conditions that are known to, or are reasonably likely to, affect individuals of a species negatively. The term “threat” includes actions or conditions that have a direct impact on individuals (direct impacts), as well as those that affect individuals through alteration of their habitat or required resources (stressors). The term “threat” may encompass—either together or separately—the source of the action or condition, or the action or condition itself. However, the mere identification of any threat(s) may not be sufficient to compel a finding that the information in the petition is substantial information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted. The information presented in the petition must include evidence sufficient to suggest that these threats may be affecting the species to the point that the species may meet the definition of an endangered species or threatened species under the Act. If we find that a petition presents such information, our subsequent status review will evaluate all identified threats by considering the individual-, population-, and species-level effects and the expected response by the species. We will evaluate individual threats and their expected effects on the species, then analyze the cumulative effect of the threats on the species as a whole. We also consider the cumulative effect of the threats in light of those actions and conditions that are expected to have positive effects on the species—such as any existing regulatory mechanisms or conservation efforts that may ameliorate threats. It is only after conducting this cumulative analysis of threats and the actions that may ameliorate them, and the expected effect on the species now and in the foreseeable future, that we can determine whether the species meets the definition of an endangered species or threatened species under the Act. If we find that a petition presents substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted, the Act requires that we promptly commence a review of the status of the species, and we will subsequently complete a status review in accordance with our prioritization methodology for 12-month findings (81 FR 49248; July 27, 2016). <HD SOURCE="HD1">Summary of Petition Finding</HD> <HD SOURCE="HD2">Species and Range</HD> <HD SOURCE="HD3">Currently Listed Entities</HD> • Gray wolf ( <E T="03">Canis lupus</E> ) is listed as endangered in all or portions of 43 of the contiguous United States (all of Alabama, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Indiana, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Maryland, Maine, Michigan, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, North Dakota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Vermont, Wisconsin, and West Virginia; and portions of Arizona, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and Washington) and Mexico. This entity also includes a designated nonessential experimental population in Colorado. • Gray wolf ( <E T="03">Canis lupus</E> ) is listed as threatened in Minnesota. <HD SOURCE="HD3">Petitioned Actions for Revising the Currently Listed Entities</HD> Petitioners asked us to revise the currently listed gray wolf entities by splitting and/or combining the current listings for gray wolf into one or more DPSs and a non-DPS remnant (Sportsmen's Alliance Foundation et al. 2023b, pp. 25-26, footnote 52). <HD SOURCE="HD2">Evaluation of Information Summary</HD> On June 29, 2023, we received two concurrently filed “companion” petitions from the Sportsmen's Alliance Foundation, Michigan Bear Hunters Association, Upper Peninsula Bear Houndsmen Association, and Wisconsin Bear Hunters Association (petitioners). Petitioners urged us to consider their petitions simultaneously (Sportsmen's Alliance Founda ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Preview showing 10k of 15k characters. Full document text is stored and available for version comparison. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
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