Monthly Archives: August 2009

Manatees vs.swimmers

From Public Empoloyees for Environmental Responsibility:

FEDS OKAY TOURISTS SWIMMING WITH MANATEES
Fish & Wildlife Service Rejects PEER Petition to End “Swim-With” Permits

Washington, DC – While the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service concedes growing concerns with tourists being allowed to swim with endangered Florida manatees, the agency has rejected a petition to ban the practice or impose new safeguards, according to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).  In July, PEER had petitioned the agency to stop giving out commercial “swim-with” permits, adopt rules that forbid swimming with the manatees and safeguard key manatee breeding areas.

In a letter dated August 25, 2009, the Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS) indicated that it would take no action at this time, although it had yet to make a decision on whether to designate Kings Bay, Three Sisters Springs and Homosassa Springs as critical habitat for the manatee, an action that would restrict swimming in those areas during winter months.

Most significantly, FWS is refusing to directly prohibit manatee “swim-with” programs that promote direct encounters in manatee lagoons.  In its letter, the agency conceded that complaints were increasing and that law enforcement “officers do believe, though, that existing laws could better define harassment” (harassment of endangered species is already illegal).  Nonetheless, FWS argued that its commercial permits provide “a significant management tool which currently minimizes harassment.”  In addition, FWS said it was taking unspecified “additional steps to better manage manatee harassment concerns.”

“This was a ‘don’t worry, be happy’ non-response that failed to provide any indication of precisely what the Service is doing or why anyone should believe it will work,” stated PEER Staff Counsel Christine Erickson, who filed the petition.  “We have tried to take a cooperative approach, asking the Fish & Wildlife Service to exercise its discretion to better protect the manatee; so now we will have to resort to litigation in order to obtain any additional safeguards.”

PEER contends that the current practices are manifestly ineffective in protecting the manatee from tens of thousands of people poking, chasing, standing on or kicking manatees, as well as separating mothers from calves each year.  Since it filed the petition, PEER has received numerous videos from citizens showing swimmers abusing manatees.  Yet in its letter, FWS stated it “identified very few events that warranted the issuance of citations,” dismissing increased complaints as reflecting “the public’s poor understanding of what constitutes harassment under the law.”

“How can the public understand the existing regulations when the Fish & Wildlife Service admits their own officers need better legal guidance?” asked Erickson.  “The real problem seems to be the Service evading its legal responsibility to do what is necessary to preserve and protect this iconic Florida species.”

PEER is also filing a Freedom of Information Act request with FWS for documents describing what “additional steps” it claims to be taking as well as evidence of why the agency has reason to assert that these steps will work.  FWS records previously obtained by PEER showed harassment on the increase while attempts to minimize violations through permits and enforcement has been highly unsuccessful.

Turning trees’ carbon into silver

Nice piece here from the Philly Inky. Don’t cut down that tree.

Al Gore exposes another Republican fool

Good view.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5A6h6r7qaY&feature=fvw

USGS: Sick fish may get sicker

That’s the key finding of this USGS study.

Large trees declining in Yosemite

And the planet’s changing climate could well be having an impact, as this U.S. Geological Survey study shows. What would John Muir say? I think I know.

As Arctic warms, U.S. must act

That’s the headline over this Anchorage Daily News article.

A new eyesore to feast your eyes on

DSC_0600I’ve already submitted this entry to James Howard Kunstler (see the blog address in the column to the right), but couldn’t resist posting same here. This gem was found nearTucson, Ariz., earlier this month.

Does the wind blow enough?

That’s the headline over this nice wind-power overview from today’s Rutland (Vt.) Herald.

Research study: Mercury found in every fish tested

This is yet another reason to stop burning coal, a fossil fuel, to make electricity (which a lot of people continue to waste, by the way). Read this NY Times snippet for more info. I remember the day my boss, then a full colonel and commander of the USAF fighter wing at Kunsan Air Base, South Korea, shamed unit commanders into turning outside lights off during the day. How did he do this? By showing photographs at a wing staff meeting that showed those lights burning during daylight hours.

To learn more about how mercury, a heavy metal, gets into our atmosphere, NOAA has a nice tutorial here.

Ruling on longline fishing aids turtles

A too much of a compromise in a long-debated situation. Here’s the NY Times’ article.