Native Plant Conservation Campaign News
January 13, 2016
 
New review of Federal Endangered Species Act: ESA still underfunded, plants still overlooked, climate change creates tough challenges, but progress is achievable
 
This article provides excellent documentation and analysis of past effectiveness (and lack thereof) of the Endangered Species Act as well as good recommendations for improvement.
 
See links and SUMMARY below.
 
The data show that plants continue to receive vastly inferior funding, legal protection, and conservation attention compared to most other taxonomic groups:
“…plants now comprise 55 percent of all listed taxa, far more than any other taxonomic group. From 1998 to 2012, however, plants accounted for less than 12 percent of FWS funding for all listed species”
 
In 2012:
 
Species Recovery in the United States: Increasing the Effectiveness of the Endangered Species Act
 
Evans, et al. 
Winter 2016
Issues in Ecology
Ecological Society of America 
 
Full article: 
http://www.esa.org/esa/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Issue20.pdf
 
If the above link doesn't work, go to the main page and click on Issue #20:
http://www.esa.org/esa/science/issues/
 
Excerpt:
….Critics [of the Endangered Species Act] point out that recovery efforts are focused disproportionately on charismatic species, to the detriment of others, particularly plants... 
 
Summary:
The Endangered Species Act (ESA) has succeeded in shielding hundreds of species from extinction and improving species recovery over time. However, recovery for most species officially protected by the ESA – i.e., listed species—has been harder to achieve than initially envisioned. Threats to species are persistent and pervasive, funding has been insufficient, the distribution of money among listed species is highly uneven, and at least 10 times more species than are actually listed probably qualify for listing. Moreover, many listed species will require ongoing management for the foreseeable future to protect them from persistent threats. Climate change will exacerbate this problem and increase both species risk and management uncertainty, requiring more intensive and controversial management strategies to prevent species from going extinct.
 
In this Issue, we provide an overview of the ESA, summarize the causes and patterns of species endangerment in the United States, identify key successes and shortcomings of recovery programs, and discuss the following six broad strategies to increase the effectiveness of ESA implementation:
 
1. Establish and consistently apply a system for prioritizing recovery funding to maximize strategic outcomes for listed species.
2. Strengthen partnerships for species recovery by expanding collaboration among federal agencies, the states, and nongovernmental organizations and by developing incentives for private landowners.
3. Promote more monitoring and adaptive management for species recovery. Conduct targeted, efficient monitoring programs to assess species status and improve management strategies, and use adaptive management to deal with ecological complexity and uncertainty.
4. Refine methods to develop more objective, measurable recovery criteria based on the best available science.
5. Use well-established climate-smart conservation strategies such as increasing habitat connectivity and reducing nonclimate stressors; evaluate and consider using innovative climate adaptation strategies, including protecting potential future habitats, assisted colonization, and engineering new habitats.
6. Evaluate ecosystem-based approaches such as surrogate species and coarse ecological filters to develop methods that increase the efficiency of managing for recovery.