Protecting Grizzly Bears
Faced with shrinking habitat, the loss of critical food sources, and the impacts of climate change, grizzly bears are struggling to survive. Indeed, only 1,700-1,800 grizzlies remain in the lower 48 states, about 700 of which call the Greater Yellowstone area home.
Greater Yellowstone grizzly bears were federally protected by the Endangered Species Act from 1975-2017. The chief threat to the species is the decline of whitebark pine, whose seed is a critical food source. Numerous scientific studies characterize the grizzly population as unrecovered, and its future as uncertain.
Still, the Trump administration removed Endangered Species Act protections for Yellowstone grizzly bears, opening the door for trophy hunting. In late August, 2017 with our partners at WildEarth Guardians, we went to court to reverse this decision. Among other issues, our reasoning includes:
- Removing federal protections is premature and violates the Service’s mandate to recover grizzlies under the Endangered Species Act.
- The Service’s conclusion that changes in food resources – in particular as a result of climate change – do not now, nor will they in the future, negatively impact Greater Yellowstone grizzly bears is incorrect and not supported by the best available science.
- The proposed rule’s designation of the Greater Yellowstone population of grizzly bears as a distinct population segment for the sole purpose of delisting violates the Endangered Species Act and existing case law.
- The “significant portion of its range” analysis of grizzly habitat, used to buttress the argument for delisting, fails to consider lost historic range due to human encroachment and climate change.
- We disagree with the Service that allowing hunting for a grizzly population only arguably recovered, and even then only in one population, will not significantly harm grizzly bears.
On September 24, 2018, a U.S. District Court ordered Greater Yellowstone’s back on the endangered species list, stopping trophy hunts scheduled for Wyoming and Idaho. The state of Wyoming and the Trump administration appealed our victory and lost in July of 2020.
News & Updates
Advocates target bear baiting in ID, WY grizzly country
Today, wildlife advocates notified the federal government they plan to legally challenge its authorization of bear baiting on National Forest System lands in Idaho and Wyoming for violations of the Endangered Species Act, citing harms to protected grizzly bears and...
Yellowstone grizzlies: Court reinstates protections, blocks ID, WY trophy hunts
Today, a U.S. District Court judge ruled against the Trump administration, reversing the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's 2017 decision to strip grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem of vital Endangered Species Act protections. The court ruled that the...
Yellowstone grizzlies: Court blocks ID, WY trophy hunts for 14 more days
MISSOULA, Mont. —Today, a U.S. District Court judge extended a temporary restraining order to block planned grizzly bear trophy hunts in Idaho and Wyoming for 14 more days while he prepares a ruling. The judge may only renew a temporary restraining order such as this...
Related Documents
- Appeal Order Upholding Victory (7.8.20)
- Final Decision Restoring Protections (9.24.18)
- Temporary Restraining Order Extended (9.13.18)
- Temporary Restraining Order Granted (8.30.18)
- Temporary Restraining Order (8.30.18)
- Temporary Restraining Order Memo (8.30.18)
- Complaint (8.30.17)
- North Cascades Grizzly Reintroduction Comments (3.9.17)
- GYE Grizzly Delisting Comments, Part 1 of 2 (5.10.16)
- GYE Grizzly Delisting Comments, Part 2 of 2 (5.10.16)