NewsMontana News

Actions

Petition pushes to update 30-year-old grizzly bear recovery plan in Montana

Regional and national organizations filed a petition Wednesday to change the management of grizzly bears in the Northern Rockies.
Grizzly Recovery Plan 1
Grizzly Bear Recovery Plan 2
Posted
and last updated

MISSOULA — Regional and national organizations filed a petition Wednesday to change the management of grizzly bears in the Northern Rockies.

In 1993, Christopher Servheen wrote the report that the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS) currently uses to manage grizzly bear recovery in the lower 48.

After more than 30 years and retiring, he updated it. Now, the report is at the center of a new petition, asking FWS to change its approach to grizzlies.

The petition, filed Wednesday morning on behalf of regional and national conservation organizations, comes about a month before USFWS must decide the fate of grizzly protections in Wyoming, and potentially the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and beyond.

The filing asks USFWS to update the 1993 grizzly recovery plan, based on new science and new threats that have come up in the intervening years.

The current plan was written by Servheen during his tenure as the agency’s grizzly bear recovery coordinator between 1981 and 2016.

Now, Servheen says the bears’ futures depend on FWS taking modern science into consideration.

“It's important to realize that recovery is more than just how many bears are out there,” Servheen said. “The grizzly bears in the Northern U.S. Rockies live in only 4% of their former range in the lower 48 states.”

In accordance with the 1993 plan, grizzlies are currently managed in five distinct recovery areas in Montana, Wyoming, Idaho and eastern Washington. Servheen calls for FWS to, instead, manage grizzlies in the Northern Rockies as one.

“The 1993 recovery plan managed grizzly bears as separate island populations because at that time we didn't think we could ever even fill up the islands with bears. Today we see them actually trying to connect across the landscape. Grizzlies would be most secure as one large interconnected population, which is called a metapopulation, and essentially that would connect all of those four ecosystems in the Northern Rockies, along with the Bitterroot into one unified population,” Servheen said.

The 15 organizations behind the petition say it provides a path towards a healthy, resilient grizzly population in the lower 48 by allowing bears, and their genetics, to move between populations.

If adopted, they say it could bring funding and awareness to reduce human-bear conflicts, improve co-existence, and help grizzlies adapt to climate change as food sources and availability shift.

“Revising the plan as Dr. Servheen is proposing, it’s allowing us to finish the marathon,” said Max Hjortsberg with the Park County Environmental Council. “We don’t want to stop running the marathon at 24 miles and say that we finished it. We’re close but we still have a little ways to go.”

The petition comes after years of debate about grizzly bears’ protection status under the Endangered Species Act (ESA).

Montana, Wyoming and Idaho have all asked FWS to delist grizzlies, removing ESA protections, and let the states manage their own populations.

A federal judge ordered USFWS on December 6 to make a final decision about Wyoming’s petition to delist by January 20, 2025.