
29th Annual Meeting and Symposium of the
Desert Tortoise Council, February 20-23, 2004 Abstracts

Center for Biological Diversity Works for Tortoise Recovery:
Challenging BLM Plans, FWS Biological Opinions & Bush
Daniel R. Patterson
Center for Biological
Diversity, POB 710 Tucson Arizona 85702 USA
In 1976, Congress designated a 25 million acre swath of Sonoran,
Mojave and Great Basin deserts - stretching from the Mexican border
north to Death Valley and the eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains - as the
California Desert Conservation Area (CDCA). The CDCA includes some of
the most scenic and biologically important areas in Imperial, San Diego,
Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino, Kern, Inyo and Mono counties.
This Virginia-sized expanse was entrusted to Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
to be forever protected for wildlife, open space, sustainable use and
human enjoyment.
BLM's 11 million acre share of the CDCA contains 3.4 million acres of
habitat designated critical to the survival and recovery of the
threatened desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii).1 The CDCA is also
harbors 23 other federally protected threatened or endangered species
including Peninsular Ranges bighorn sheep, Inyo California towhee,
desert pupfish, Coachella Valley fringe-toed lizard and rare plants such
as Cushenberry oxytheca, Amargosa niterwort and Peirson's milkvetch.
These 24 species and the entire ecological health of the CDCA are
jeopardized by new BLM plans which favor the historic status quo of
mining, livestock grazing, road building, utility projects, and off-roading. Imperiled species, such as the desert tortoise, are
declining as regional planning efforts short-change wildlife by not
implementing recovery plans.
In late 2000 and early 2001, The Center for Biological Diversity (CBD),
Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), the Sierra
Club, and five off-road groups settled a landmark lawsuit with BLM over
its failure to follow the Endangered Species Act. In the settlement BLM
agreed to: prohibit mining expansions or new mines on all designated or
occupied T&E species habitat within the CDCA; reduce or prohibit
livestock on 1.9 million acres; prohibit ORVs on 550,000 acres of
sensitive habitat areas-including 49,310 acres of the Algodones Sand
Dunes; route designation on 874,000 acres of the West Mojave; complete
desert wide route designation by 2004; and other conservation and
recovery measures.2 The CDCA settlement had BLM implementing some
on-the-ground recovery actions - but its balanced management is
abandoned as BLM rolls-back protections across millions of acres.
Aided by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) no-jeopardy biological
opinions, BLM has approved final Northern and Eastern Colorado Desert
Plan (NECO), Northern and Eastern Mojave Desert Plan (NEMO), Coachella
Valley Plan, Western Colorado Desert Routes of Travel Plan (WECO), and
Algodones (Imperial) Dunes Plan, but all these plans fall far short of
species and habitat recovery needs. Species recovery plans are not
implemented, despite a finding by GAO that the tortoise plan is based on
sound science. With the proposed Ft. Irwin expansion lurking, and an
aggressive anti-environmental administration, the abandonment of the
minimum species recovery shield provided by the CDCA settlement
represents a dangerous roll-back in wildlife protection. The settlement
remains in place within the West Mojave (WEMO) planning area until plan
completion. The roll-back of conservation through these BLM plans forced
new litigation against Interior, especially challenges to flawed FWS
biological opinions.
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1U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, final rule (59-5820),
Federal Register, 2/8/94.
2Center for Biological Diversity, Legal Settlement Protects
24 Endangered Species on 11 Million Acres, www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/GOLDENSTATE/CDCA/SETTLEMENT.HTML
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