I’ve never heard of this cuckoo, but I’m reasonably sure that most, if not all, live in the fracking zones.
Why does Barbara Boxer need such a big playpen?
I thought the Western Cuckoo was Jerry Brown.
Given that cuckoos are parasitic on other birds I think their extinction should be applauded.
Now if we could only kill off cowbirds.
I assume Mexico is exempt.
If these people honestly believed in “Evolution”, they would stop trying to prevent it. Evolution REQUIRES “survival of the fittest”!
I gather that modern “environmentalism” is a kind of punishment inflicted on us humans by our un-natural tendency to feel compassion for life’s “losers”.
Unanswered: how much of that kind of “compassion” can we actually afford?
How many “endangered species” birds are roasted by solar farms and chopped by windmills?
They are “seeking information” to what? They want to see how many laws they can straddle law-abiding citizens with.
I think the reason that Liberals put such importance on teaching evolution in schools is so that we’ll be able to figure out ways to stop it!
The "western" yellow-billed cuckoo (YBCU) is NOT a species! It's a race (sub-species) of YBCU. The tyrannical edicts of the ESA should not apply here!
And as far as I know, the western race of YBCU has always been uncommon to rare, but stable. They arrive very late for a neotropic migrant to their breeding grounds, typically arriving in mid-June. Their stronghold seems to be along the Lower Colorado River from around Blythe to Lake Mead, particularly at the Bill Williams NWR near Havasu.
And, yes, hundreds of acres of cottonwoods (their favorite nesting trees) have been replanted in this area, and the reveg work is ongoing.
Again, this is absurd federal overreach, plain and simple, but we all know that.
The same Government agencies that ignore Wind and Solar farms that are killing billions of birds -all species, common and soon to be endangered).
Insanity can be defined as *Man thinking he is God*. AKA Socialist Democrats.
Go to this link for links to all of the maps. It would appear this is the Fed trying to control major water areas in the west.
I vaguely remember that Ann Richards was supposed to use the same bird to lock out thousands of acres in Barton Springs from use by humans in 1994. But the sudden appearance of thousands of farmers and cattlemen on the day she was supposed to sign showed up and pitched their vehicles all around Austin. Some people say they started cleaning their weapons while parked there and this helped to settle her mind.
Looking at the maps of proposed ‘critical habitat’ in my area, almost ALL of it is on private land where farming and ranching takes place. It is also where we farmers and ranchers own our water rights. This is about ending farming and ranching and control of the water, which of course means not using it so it can be ‘free’.
http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/news/press_releases/2014/yellow-billed-cuckoo-08-14-2014.html
546,335 Acres in 9 Western States Proposed as Protected Critical Habitat for Yellow-billed Cuckoos
For Immediate Release, August 14, 2014
Contact: Michael Robinson (575) 313-7017
Protection Will Benefit Rare Songbird and Health of Rivers in
Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Utah and Wyoming
SACRAMENTO, Calif. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today proposed to protect more than a half-million acres of critical habitat across the West for the yellow-billed cuckoo, a songbird that lives along rivers and streams. The bird was proposed for Endangered Species Act protection in October 2013 as part of a 2011 agreement with the Center for Biological Diversity to speed protection decisions for 757 imperiled species nationwide. Todays proposal would protect 546,335 acres of streamside habitat in nine western states including Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Utah and Wyoming.
Photo courtesy Flickr Commons/Seabamirum. This photo is available for media use.
This is an important victory not just for yellow-billed cuckoos but for rivers and streams across the West, said Michael Robinson, a conservation advocate at the Center, which first petitioned for the cuckoos protection in 1998.
The cuckoo was identified as being in need of federal protection in 1986. It once thrived along nearly every water body in the West, but its population has been devastated by dams, livestock grazing, water withdrawals, river channelization and other factors. Today it survives in scattered locations in very small numbers, including portions of the Sacramento, Eel and Kern rivers in California; the Colorado, Gila, Verde and San Pedro rivers in Arizona; the Gila and Rio Grande rivers in New Mexico; and scattered locations in Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, Texas, Wyoming and Utah. Historically it was common from the shores of Lake Washington in Seattle to the mouth of the Colorado River.
The birds Endangered Species Act protection is expected to be finalized in October, and todays proposed critical habitat designation should be finalized in October 2015. Critical habitat protection will require any federally funded or permitted projects that could harm the cuckoos habitat to consult with the Fish and Wildlife Service to ensure that the habitat is not harmed. Species with protected critical habitat are more than twice as likely to be recovering compared to those without.
The cuckoo is a visually striking bird with a long tail with flashy white markings. It is also referred to as the rain crow for its habit of singing right before storms. It breeds in streamside gallery forests of cottonwood and willow. The cuckoo is one of the few species that can eat spiny caterpillars, such as tent caterpillars.
The cuckoos decline is representative of the poor job weve done caring for our waterways, so this proposal is a big step toward being better stewards of our rivers and streams, said Robinson. Protecting these streamside habitats will also protect healthy water quality for people.
Under the landmark 2011 agreement between the Center and the Service to speed review of species awaiting Endangered Species Act decisions, 128 species have gained protection to date, and another 15 have been proposed for protection, including the cuckoo.
The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 775,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.
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