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The Associated Press
The Associated Press
A coho salmon fry is shown off the coast of Oregon. Environmentalists have appealed the ruling that took Oregon coastal coho salmon off the threatened species list.

Environmentalists appeal ruling

Groups want coho to keep threatened species status

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Originally published November 17, 2001

GRANTS PASS, Ore. -- Environmentalists on Friday appealed the court ruling that took Oregon coastal coho salmon off the threatened species list and prompted the federal government to review protection for salmon throughout the West.

When the appeal was made possible by U.S. District Judge Michael J. Hogan in Eugene earlier this week granted a coalition of environmental and commercial fishing groups the right to intervene in the case so they can try to overturn his decision.

Given their interest in restoring Oregon coastal coho salmon populations, the groups can bring their own appeal because the government decided not to appeal, Hogan wrote.

The action puts another wrinkle in the increasingly complicated status of salmon in the West.

After deciding against an appeal, the National Marine Fisheries Service announced last week that, based on Hogan's ruling, it would take the next year to review whether 23 of the 25 groups of Pacific salmon and steelhead protected under the Endangered Species Act should keep their listings.

Prior to coming to those decisions, NMFS would decide whether to expand the role of hatcheries in restoring salmon populations, the core of Hogan's original ruling. Current federal policy considers hatchery fish a threat to the survival of wild fish because they compete for limited food and habitat, carry disease, and are less successful at survival in the wild.

Hogan ruled Sept. 12 that NMFS was arbitrary and capricious when it lumped hatchery and wild fish together in the same group, known as an evolutionarily significant unit, then granted Endangered Species Act protection only to the wild fish.

Earthjustice attorney Patti Goldman, representing the environmental and fishing groups, said from Seattle that she would file a motion next week asking the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to suspend Hogan's original ruling and restore the salmon listing pending the appeal.

Hogan denied a similar request.

Lifting the listing for Oregon coastal coho allowed logging to begin on several federal timber sales that had been shelved to protect coho habitat.

Goldman said she did not expect the appeals court to rule for a year, about the same time NMFS would finish reviewing the status of the other salmon stocks and revising its hatchery policy.

NMFS decided it was better to review the salmon situation in light of Hogan's ruling than to run the risk of losing an appeal, which could result in Hogan's ruling being applied throughout the West and lifting 22 other salmon listings, NMFS spokesman Brian Gorman said.

Russell Brooks of the Pacific Legal Foundation, the public interest property rights law firm that brought the original case, said he was confident that the ruling would hold up under appeal.

Meanwhile the Pacific Legal Foundation has decided to file another lawsuit before Hogan challenging the listing of coho salmon in the Klamath River.

The Olympian Copyright 2001

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