28Apr2019
North America’s
most endangered bird, the grasshopper sparrow that inhabits Central Florida’s
shrinking prairie, is facing a new threat: a feud among wildlife managers and
scientists.
In a
letter to researchers last month, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said it
planned to shut down a Palm Beach County breeding program, the larger of only
two in the nation, amid ongoing concerns over a newly identified parasite
making the birds sick. Federal managers want to free some birds and move others
to the second facility in North Florida. Researchers fear those actions could
spread the parasite and endanger the last wild population.
The Fish
and Wildlife Service also wants to end its partnership with the Rare Species
Conservatory Foundation, saying disagreements with the director and a
University of Georgia vet are “paralyzing” efforts and could hasten the
extinction of the golf ball-sized bird.
But the
researchers say the agency’s abrupt decision could be far more hazardous,
ignoring warnings to proceed cautiously and take more time to evaluate .
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