Posted on 10/09/2006 12:51:27 PM PDT by Liberty Valance
The Freedom View (Editorial page) The Colorado Springs Gazette
Regular readers of this page may have followed the plight of the Devils Hole pupfish, a rare creature confined to a single limestone cave in remote Death Valley, whose already tenuous existence has taken a turn for the worse since winning federal protection as an endangered species. Unlike many listed species, the pupfish really is a rarity the kind of animal for which the much-misused Endangered Species Act was designed. Weve followed its travails because the creatures plummet toward extinction has actually accelerated under the care of bumbling wildlife bureaucrats, making a strong case that the worst thing that ever happened to the pupfish was federal protection.
The fishs prospects of being fruitful and multiplying were tenuous from the start. As far as science knows, they exist only in a single natural spring in remote Death Valley, so the fish has extinction written all over it.
They were on a slow decline, but holding their own, until 2004, when wildlife biologists doing a pupfish census left fish traps improperly stored. The improperly stored traps were washed into the spring during a flash food and killed a third of the pupfish population. Desperate, federal officials moved some to a "refugium" near Hoover Dam, the Shark Reef Aquarium at the Mandalay Bay Resort in Las Vegas and a fish hatchery in Nevada. The hope is to rebuild pupfish stocks with a captive breeding program, but even that effort has hit snails ... sorry, we meant snags.
The pupfish had to be removed from the Hoover Dam refugium, according to a story published a few weeks back, after the tank became infested with invasive snails. How the invasion began is uncertain, but one theory is that the snails slipped in on nets used by federal caretakers. This isnt necessarily a complete disaster for the pupfish. But they are never out of danger in federal hands.
In 2004, another endangered fish, the humpback chub, was nearly wiped out when federal officials agreed to release a torrent of water down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon, an exercise aimed at mimicking the rivers natural spring flood cycle. Its been estimated that 1,890 of 3,000 chub in the river perished in the deluge. Not much was been made of government actions that would land a company or private individual in court. Good intentions give the feds a free pass.
The latest setback for the pupfish came as a panel of scientists were putting together a plan to "reverse the decline of one of the most imperiled desert fish species in North America," as one media report put it. But how about this for a rescue plan: Put what fish remain back in the cave. Fence it off from the public and stop drawing attention to it. Remove the pupfish from the ESA, order federal and state biologists to leave the poor little guys alone. Then, let nature take its course.
and the darwin award goes to...the federal government.

But if you leave them alone, what are the over-paid do-gooders in these meddling and menacing federal agencies going to do with their time? In an era of $255 BILLION dollar deficits, half of these agencies could be eliminated and the poor creatures they have been persecuting would have a fighting chance.
Granting the mistakes documented here, the example is insufficient to make a case that this is anything other than an isolated case. It's certainly not proof that the Endangered Species Act is damaging to animals.
In line with the general sloppiness of this fellow's reasonins, we must note that the Colorado River release example is rather egregiously misreported. It was not done with the endangered chubs in mind, one way or the other -- yes, it was a consequence, but (unlike the impression given by the author), those fish were not even remotely the reason why it was done.
The Gazette has a good comics selection, and pretty good sports writers. And that's about it.
reasonins = reasoning
"Good intentions give the feds a free pass."
Doesn't mean the editorial is worth a crap. And it's not.
Lesson learned? Neither are the nation's citizens in a nanny state.
No, it's not proof of the more general case. An economist could probably supply that, though. Pass a law to make something have negative value and people will try to avoid being stuck with it. Efforts to prevent people from ridding themselves of the unwanted thing will increase its negative value and thus increase the efforts to be rid of it any way possible.
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