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Sunday, September 15, 2024
Courthouse News Service
Sunday, September 15, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Bay-Delta longfin smelt wins Endangered Species Act protections

Longfin smelt were once abundant in the San Francisco Bay estuary, but populations have declined more than 99% from 1980s levels.

SAN FRANCISCO (CN) — The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officially listed the San Francisco Bay-Delta population segment of the longfin smelt as an endangered species under the Endangered Species Act Monday morning. 

The longfin smelt was already listed as a threatened species under California’s Endangered Species Act, prohibiting the unpermitted possession, purchase, sale or take of the species. The service’s decision will now provide consistency between state and federal endangered species regulations, eliminating separate requirements from the state and federal levels.

The fish is 3.5 to 4.3 inches long with a translucent silver appearance on its sides and gut, while its back has an olive to iridescent pinkish hue. It lives about two to three years in bays and estuaries along the West Coast from Northern California to Alaska. The Bay-Delta longfin smelt occupies only the San Francisco Bay estuary and some areas of the Pacific Ocean.

Longfin smelt were once abundant in the San Francisco Bay estuary, but populations have declined more than 99% from 1980s levels according to Baykeeper, an Oakland-based nonprofit dedicated to defending the health of San Francisco Bay. The group attributes the fish’s decline to diversion of Central Valley tributary rivers that slash annual freshwater flow into the bay. This overuse of freshwater resources, which are mostly diverted for large-scale agricultural purposes, causes perpetual drought-like conditions for longfin smelt and other native fish in the bay.

“Like many species of fish, wildlife and their habitats, the hotter and drier climate has contributed to longfin’s decline, and the species needs our help,” said Paul Souza, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Pacific Southwest regional director, in a statement. “We are dedicated to working with others to conserve longfin smelt while recognizing the importance of wetlands in our refuges and conservation areas, the benefits of agricultural lands, and the critical water resources that sustain California's communities."

Fish and Wildlife’s decision follows extensive review and a court order to expedite the final determination. The primary threats to the longfin smelt include altered hydrology due to the aforementioned water management practices, nonnative species and the effects of climate change. The new rule extends federal protections to this fish.

The ruling is a response to a 2007 petition and years of legal action filed by Baykeeper and other environmental organizations, including a 2024 lawsuit filed by Baykeeper which sought to compel the service to abide by its October 2023 deadline to protect the longfin smelt. 

The service proposed to list the longfin smelt as endangered in 2022 because scientific analysis showed it was in danger of extinction.

In a statement, Baykeeper science director Jon Rosenfield lauded the decision but said that more needs to be done to prevent the fish from continuing to decline.

“ESA protection for longfin smelt is decades overdue, but it’s not too late. Preventing further decline and extinction of longfin smelt will require reducing California’s diversion of fresh water from the bay’s watershed to supply unsustainable industrial agriculture, and inefficient suburban landscaping,” Rosenfield said. “Our local longfin smelt population is particularly sensitive to changes in the volume of fresh water flowing into San Francisco Bay, and its catastrophic decline is yet another sign that we take too much water from the rivers that feed the bay.”

With the longfin smelt listing, there are now six imperiled fish species native to the bay that are now protected under the federal Endangered Species Act.

Categories / Environment, Government

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