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Sunday, September 1, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Feds eye rare California fish for endangered species protections

The Long Valley speckled dace struggle to survive in just one spring and a small creek east of Mammoth Lakes.

(CN) — The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Wednesday proposed listing the Long Valley speckled dace, a rare minnow native to the eastern Sierra Nevada, as an endangered species. 

The decision stems from a petition from the Center for Biological Diversity seeking to protect the subspecies on the brink of extinction due to various environmental threats.

“Endangered Species Act protections will provide a badly needed lifeline for Long Valley speckled dace, which survive at only two locations,” said Jeff Miller, a senior conservation advocate at the Center for Biological Diversity, in a statement.

The dace, found only in the Long Valley volcanic caldera and the upper Owens River watershed in eastern California, once thrived in springs and creeks throughout the upper Owens Basin in Mono County. Today, they struggle to survive in just one spring and a small creek east of Mammoth Lakes.

The rare fish faces threats from a variety of human activities such as gold mining, redirecting water for human needs, trampling and habitat damage from cattle and burros, pumping groundwater for solar energy development, and further adverse impacts from ongoing climate change.

These factors have dried up their natural habitats, leading to their drastic decline. The Center for Biological Diversity petitioned for the fish's protection in 2020, highlighting the urgent need for conservation efforts.

According to the center, Long Valley speckled dace are specifically adapted to live in warm springs and creeks. However, geothermal energy development and water diversions have significantly reduced or dried up many of these springs.

Excessive groundwater pumping and climate change have exacerbated the problem, as the aquifers feeding these springs depend on snowmelt for recharge. As a result, the dace have disappeared from many suitable habitats, including Hot Creek, Little Alkali Lake, and various isolated springs and ponds.

Currently, only one small and declining natural population of Long Valley speckled dace remains at Whitmore Hot Springs. 

Some fish have been relocated to a few locations along O’Harrel Canyon Creek. A few hundred of these fish are maintained in an artificial pond at a managed refuge in Inyo County, which is outside the species’ historical range.

By protecting the Long Valley speckled dace under the Endangered Species Act, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service hopes to implement measures that will help the fish recover and thrive once again. 

These measures might include habitat restoration, management of invasive species, and ensuring sufficient water flow in their natural habitats. Without these protections, the Long Valley speckled dace could face extinction. 

According to Miller, these protections are a vital step toward ensuring the survival of this unique subspecies in its natural habitat. Without immediate and sustained conservation efforts, the future of the Long Valley speckled dace remains uncertain.

“This is a good first step, but these tenacious minnows will need emergency action and a coordinated recovery effort,” he said in the statement.

Categories / Environment, Government

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