VenomLand
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.



 
HomePortalGalleryLatest imagesRegisterLog in
Please beware, to register at venomland you are requested to use your full name (first and family name) - nicknames are not allowed and will be not activated! thx

Dear Venomland Members and Friends, Venomland is a little more than 6 years old now and by far the biggest Hot Snake community on the Planet! We want to thank all of you who made Venomland the leading Board. We are also very thankful to our Moderators and Admins for years of hard work. Now, it is time to move on. I have been thinking how to proceed and what to do with our beloved board as we reach a size, that we need to make drastic changes to secure the future of our community. As of now, Venomland is hosted by a free (well mostly free) hosting service. That was good for the first years but now we need to find a new way to run our forum. I have spend hundreds of Dollars over the years to keep Venomland up and running, and i have done so with pleasure. Now, we need your help! We need to come up with several thousand dollars for our Venomland 2.0 project, which i frankly cant pay for any longer by myself. So Venomland is asking his Friends and Members for the first time for their financial Support. Please help to keep Venomland alive, and let us move on to a new, better Portal in the Future! Every Dollar is helping us a great deal. I know, its hard times for everyone, but please spare a few Dollar for our community. If you have only 10 Dollars to spare, we are grateful, if it is more, it would be awesome. We are planning to develop a very new Venomland, with real community functions, a forum like you are already loving it and a real (online) Hot Snake Magazin. Also, there will be download areas for scientific papers, Wallpapers and more. Again folks, we can only do that if you all help. Please send me a Private Message if you want to keep Venomland alive, i will provide you with the details on how to donate Money. For now, we can accept money from creditcards via skrill (please google it, its a free service - account-details will be forwarded to you) and paypal. All the best, and for a (hopefully) nice future of our Board. Mario

 

 CALIFORNIA TIGER SALAMANDER DECLARED CANDIDATE FOR LISTING UNDER CALIFORNIA ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT

Go down 
AuthorMessage
Mario Lutz
Lord of the Serpents
Lord of the Serpents
Mario Lutz


Male
Number of posts : 1416
Age : 56
Location : Puerto Galera, Philippines
Points : 8201
Registration date : 2008-03-06

CALIFORNIA TIGER SALAMANDER DECLARED CANDIDATE FOR LISTING UNDER CALIFORNIA ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT Empty
PostSubject: CALIFORNIA TIGER SALAMANDER DECLARED CANDIDATE FOR LISTING UNDER CALIFORNIA ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT   CALIFORNIA TIGER SALAMANDER DECLARED CANDIDATE FOR LISTING UNDER CALIFORNIA ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT Icon_minitimeSat 28 Feb - 18:11

News Release
February 27, 2009

Court Order Required to Force State to Accept Listing Petition

SACRAMENTO, Calif.— The California Fish and Game Commission last week formally designated the California Tiger Salamander (Ambystoma californiense) as a candidate for threatened or endangered status under the California Endangered Species Act, extending legal protections to the species for one year while a status review is conducted. The Commission was forced by a Center for Biological Diversity petition and lawsuit, and a recent court of appeals ruling, to make the designation, and yesterday also illegally approved interim “take” regulations that improperly exempt projects that may harm tiger salamanders from the interim take protections under the Act.

“Despite the Fish and Game Commission’s misguided attempts to repeatedly deny protected status to the California Tiger Salamander, the candidate designation sets the listing process back on the right track and should ultimately result in the tiger salamander getting the state protected status it deserves,” said Jeff Miller, a conservation advocate with the Center for Biological Diversity. “Every expert biologist who studies the California Tiger Salamander has weighed in and recommended the species be listed.”

The Center for Biological Diversity petitioned the Commission in 2004 to list the California Tiger Salamander as endangered due to the impacts of urban and agricultural development. The Santa Barbara County salamander population has been listed as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act since 2000, as has the Sonoma County population since 2003. The central California population has been federally listed as threatened since 2004.

The Commission rejected the petition in 2004, falsely claiming it did not contain all of the data necessary to prove the salamander population deserved protection. The Center filed suit, and the Commission was forced by court order and a state appeals court ruling in September 2008 to accept the petition. The state Supreme Court refused to review the appeals court ruling. The Commission last week voted 3-2 for candidacy, clearly reluctant to protect the species. One Commissioner repeatedly referred to the presence of California Tiger Salamanders on private land as a “salamander problem” and referred to the court that issued the petition acceptance order as a “jerks” and “stupid.”

The Commission also voted Thursday to implement incidental “take” regulation containing overly broad exemptions that allow projects to harm California Tiger Salamanders without conducting an adequate review under the California Environmental Quality Act.

State candidate species are afforded many of the legal protections of endangered or threatened species while a year-long status review is conducted. A final state listing determination for the California Tiger Salamander is due in February 2010.

The court decision on the California Tiger Salamander has potential implications for other poorly monitored species, since the court ruled that the Commission must consider a listing petition if the information would “lead a reasonable person to conclude there is a substantial possibility” that the species could be listed.

In 2008 the Commission denied a listing petition to protect the American Pika, a small relative of the rabbit, which is threatened by warming temperatures due to global climate change. In 2008 it also denied a petition to protect the Pacific Fisher, a small forest carnivore that is related to otters and is threatened by logging and development in California. In both cases, the Commission claimed a lack of information prevented it from acting to protect the species. The Commission last week voted to reconsider the fisher petition rejection at its March meeting, due to the California Tiger Salamander ruling, but is expected to reject the fisher petition once again.

The California Tiger Salamander depends on ephemeral vernal pools for breeding. In recent decades 95 percent of California’s vernal pools have been lost, and at least 75 percent of the salamander’s habitat throughout the state has been eliminated. In Sonoma County, 95 percent of the fragmented and minimal remaining salamander habitat is threatened by development; the Santa Barbara population is also on the verge of extinction. The Sonoma population survives in only seven viable breeding sites and the Santa Barbara population consists of only six breeding groups.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a nonprofit conservation organization with 200,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

Jeff Miller
Center for Biological Diversity
351 California Street, Suite 600
San Francisco, California 94104
Phone: (415) 436-9682 x303
Fax: (415) 436-9683
http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/
Back to top Go down
http://www.venomland.org
 
CALIFORNIA TIGER SALAMANDER DECLARED CANDIDATE FOR LISTING UNDER CALIFORNIA ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT
Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
VenomLand :: VenomLand Forum :: News-
Jump to: