NEWSFLASH
September 9, 2008 – Groups Seek Reinstatement of Protections for Sierra Bellwether Species; Bighorn Sheep, California Condor and Northern Goshawk Habitat All Threatened
SAVING THE NORTHERN GOSHAWK
An agile and swift predator with unnerving red eyes, the northern goshawk is legendary for its ferocity, beauty, and amazing flight skills; in medieval Europe, goshawks were the most prized of all falconry hawks. Darting through trees beneath the forest canopy, they’re top-level predators. But as mature and old-growth forests suffer death by a thousand cuts, so do goshawks. In turn, their decline unravels forest ecosystems and puts stress on other species.
Luckily, in August 2008, at least some of the goshawk’s habitat got a break when the Cococino National Forest issued a decision to abandon new “goshawk guidelines” that would have sharply increased large-tree logging in the goshawk’s home throughout national forests in Arizona and New Mexico. The management guidelines, introduced in 2007, were a rewrite of 1996 standards — created in response to a Center lawsuit — that regulated logging intensity. Thanks to strong objections by the Center and allies, the Cococino National Forest decided not to implement the guidelines in the Jack Smith timber sale near Flagstaff, which means they can’t be legally used anywhere else.
In order to save the goshawk and the forests it depends on, the Center launched an ambitious campaign to list the northern goshawk as endangered and in so doing, to protect all mature forests from Alaska to Mexico. Failure spelled success: Although the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service kept the goshawk off the endangered list — despite two Center petitions and several lawsuits — our campaign compelled the U.S. Forest Service to dramatically improve protection of mature and old-growth forests across the West. New goshawk management plans were established in Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Colorado, California, Oregon, and Washington. The Center now conducts scientific research on goshawks and publishes an online review of goshawk research and conservation issues.
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