Lawsuit Seeks Emergency Listing Of Rare Nevada Wildflower
Lawsuit Seeks Emergency Listing Of Rare Nevada Wildflower
Environmentalists are suing the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to try to force the emergency listing of a rare wildflower as an endangered species after much of its population was destroyed at the site of a proposed lithium mine in Nevada.

RENO, Nev.: Environmentalists are suing the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to try to force the emergency listing of a rare wildflower as an endangered species after much of its population was destroyed at the site of a proposed lithium mine in Nevada.

The federal lawsuit the Center for Biological Diversity filed Tuesday also demands the Bureau of Land Management take immediate action to protect Tiehms buckwheat. It says the species is on the brink of extinction at the only place its known to exist on earth about 200 miles (322 kilometers) southeast of Reno.

Government scientists are continuing to investigate the mysterious, unprecedented loss of thousands of the plants discovered earlier this month at the site Ioneer Ltd. says sits above some of the largest untapped lithium deposits in the world.

They have indicated so far they agree with the Australian mining companys contention that rodents or other small mammals ate them.

The conservation group says somebody dug up the flowers as many as 17,000, or 40% of the remaining population. But it said in the lawsuit filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Las Vegas that what, or who, is to blame is irrelevant.

Regardless of the cause, all parties agree that the impact on the plants is `alarming, the lawsuit said. Emergency action is essential to address the dire situation of the plant and the on-going risk of further harm.

Ioneer declined to comment on the lawsuit. The two federal agencies didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press.

The Center for Biological Diversity and others petitioned on Oct. 8, 2019, for a listing of the buckwheat under the Endangered Species Act.

The species is found on just 10 acres (4 hectares) of land spread across 2 square miles (5 square kilometers) in the remote Silver Peak Range of Esmerelda County.

The Fish and Wildlife Service concluded in July there was enough evidence of potential threats to the plant to warrant a full 12-month review of its status. It didn’t respond at that time to the center’s request that the species be listed as threatened or endangered on an emergency basis.

The center had filed a lawsuit late last year against the Bureau of Land Management in an effort to halt the mining project. But it withdrew that lawsuit after Ioneer indicated it had completed exploration at the site and the agency officials assured the group it would enforce all federal laws in the permitting process.

The new lawsuit cites the extraordinary circumstances at hand in which the fate of a highly imperiled plant on BLM lands hangs in the balance and emergency action is clearly called for.

Patrick Donnelly, the centers Nevada state director, said Tuesday both federal agencies have failed to protect this vulnerable little wildflower.

Now its on the brink of extinction, he said. This new destruction underscores the urgent need to save Tiehms buckwheat before its too late.

Construction of the mine is scheduled to begin next year.

The lawsuit said that Tiehm’s buckwheat was estimated to have a global population of 43,921 individuals before the recent destruction of the plants sometime between July 5 and Sept. 11.

The loss of 40% of the population would leave about 26,400 individual surviving plants, the lawsuit said. It said loss of the plants remains a clear and, until stopped, ongoing threat to the species very survival.”

The lawsuit referenced a half-dozen scientists who wrote letters to the Fish and Wildlife Service last week to express their opinion that humans, not animals, caused the damage.

Botanists specializing in buckwheat and desert plants, along with mammologists, have stated that the damage appears unprecedented in severity and inconsistent with previously reported rodent depredations,” the lawsuit said.

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