U.S. Seeks to Remove Peregrine Falcon From Endangered List
Copyright 1998 New York Times
August 26, 1998
More than twice the number of peregrine falcons considered necessary for the 
recovery of the species are soaring over North America, leading the Federal 
Fish and Wildlife Service to announce a proposal today to remove the bird from 
the endangered species list.
From a low of 324 nesting pairs in 1975 -- 
five years after the falcon gained Federal protection and three years after the 
pesticide DDT was banned in the United States -- there are almost 1,600 pairs from the 
sub-Arctic forests of Alaska and Canada south to Mexico.  
 The director of the wildlife service, Jamie Rappaport Clark, made the 
announcement today at the Peregrine Fund World Center for Birds of Prey near 
Boise. Since 1974, the fund alone was responsible for more than 4,000 
peregrines being released into the wild, and government and private experts 
have reintroduced 
more than 6,000.
The center incubates the eggs of rare birds of prey like the peregrine falcon, 
California condor and aplomado falcon, and then releases them to the wild.
Since the American alligator was the first species to be removed from the 
endangered species list, in the late 1970's, only six other species have 
recovered 
enough to be taken off the list. Fourteen other species were removed after they 
either disappeared or new information was uncovered indicating that they never 
should have been on the list.
A 90-day comment period on the proposal to remove the peregrine falcon from the 
list will end on Nov. 23, and the final 
decision will come within a year. But the bird would still be protected by the 
Migratory Bird Treaty Act, which prohibits the killing, possession, 
transportation and importation of migratory birds, their eggs, parts and nests 
unless authorized by the Interior Department.
There were only 39 known pairs of peregrine 
falcons in the lower 48 states when they were listed in 1970 under what then 
was the Endangered Species Conservation Act, predecessor of the 1973 law. The 
overall recovery goal was 631 pairs.
It would be the first time that a species was removed from the list since 1994, 
when the gray whale and Arctic peregrine falcon were 
taken off.
The peregrine falcon, once known as a 
"duck hawk" and shot indiscriminately as a nuisance predator across the West, is the 
world's fastest bird. Scientists finally realized that 
pesticide contamination in the food chain was ravaging the falcons, causing thin 
eggshells that would collapse.
Peregrines remain 
aloft for hours, then swoop in at up to 200 miles an hour snatch small birds or 
bats with their talons.
The Government's proposal to take the peregrine off the endangered species list 
follows a promise in May by Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt to give 
greater priority to removing species from the list.
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