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Photo courtesy USDA

The lesser prairie chicken鈥攌nown for its flamboyant courtship behavior, where the fellas display brilliant yellow eyecombs and red air sacs as they dance about鈥攖ook center stage today when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife listing it as 鈥渢hreatened鈥 under the Endangered Species Act. The bird has suffered an 84% decline in the five states where it lives: Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas. 

 

"The alarm has been sounded,鈥 says Mike Daulton, 约炮视频鈥檚 vice president of government relations. 鈥淭his bird and its vital grassland habitat are in serious trouble.鈥

 

The potential listing is a 鈥渃all for action" for states, landowners, ranchers and energy companies to work together to conserve its habitat, Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe told Greenwire. The 90-day will begin in the coming weeks, with a final decision likely by September.

 

Ashe compared the lesser prairie chicken to the dunes sagebrush lizard, which narrowly avoided an endangered listing after federal, state and private landowners agreed鈥攙oluntarily鈥攖o conserve the shinnery oak dune habitat it depends on.

 

鈥淲e applaud the leadership and conservation investments from state and federal conservation agencies and in particular the NRCS,鈥 Daulton says. 鈥淏ut we need more help for this bird and we need it now."

 

Working with private landowners is essential, Ted Williams reported in "" for 约炮视频 magazine: 鈥淎bout 98 percent of Texas is privately owned, and in the lesser prairie chicken鈥檚 five-state range the figure is something like 70 percent. This means that without landowner cooperation in habitat maintenance and restoration, the species hasn鈥檛 got much of a chance.鈥

 

Williams paints a wonderful description of the 鈥渇irst lesser prairie chicken copulation of 2011.鈥 He also delves into the efforts of 约炮视频 Texas, 约炮视频 New Mexico, and The Nature Conservancy, who work with private landowners, and makes the case for science-based energy development that doesn鈥檛 threaten the bird or its critical habitat.

 

After all, he says, 鈥淧erhaps the most valuable tool is the Endangered Species Act鈥攏ot for enforcement, because the species isn鈥檛 listed, but as an incentive for habitat maintenance and restoration.鈥  (Read the story .)