Green | September 29, 2008 | 7 comments

Public Land Seizure for Military Bombing Range Threatens California Desert and Desert Tortoise

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JanforGore
The Bureau of Land Management has issued a Notice of Proposed Legislative Withdrawal to enable the eventual transfer of 365,906 acres of fragile public land in the Mojave Desert to the U.S. Marine Corps for bombing, tank training and other live fire exercises.

The lands identified by the Marine Corps for its Air Ground Combat Center training grounds near Twentynine Palms include habitat critical for survival of the threatened desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) and desert bighorn sheep. The Marine Corps says it needs the expansion for national security.

National security doesn't require seizing and bombing public lands and threatened species habitat, said Ileene Anderson, a biologist with the Center for Biological Diversity. The public needs more explanation on the need for the proposed expansion under which deserts and wildlife that are already in decline will fall victim to tank treads, heavy artillery and other destructive military activity.

Today's proposal is the latest in a string of threats to the tortoise. Having survived more than a million years in California's deserts, desert tortoise numbers are now crashing, particularly in the West Mojave, where much of the expansion would occur. The population decline is due to numerous factors, including disease, habitat degradation, crushing by vehicles, military and suburban development, and predators. Because of its dwindling numbers, the desert tortoise, California's official state reptile, is now protected under both federal and state endangered species acts. The expansion could also lead to additional disastrous tortoise relocations. Nearly 2,000 tortoises are already being experimentally relocated for the expansion of Fort Irwin, an Army post about 25 miles north of the Marine Corps base. That effort so far has resulted in unexpectedly high tortoise mortality rates.

In August, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued a new draft recovery plan that would weaken protections for the tortoise. The plan provides only vague descriptions of recovery actions actions that are not derived from the best available science. Recently, population genetics studies have identified the desert tortoise in the western portion of the Mojave Desert as distinctly different from its relatives to the northern, eastern, and southern portions. This finding sheds new light on why increased conservation and relocation success are more important than ever for the Fort Irwin effort.

The legacy of one million years of evolutionary history should not fall victim to our president's failed war, Anderson said. Endangered species remain the Bush administration's very lowest priority and in its final days, the administration appears to have set its sights on speeding the desert tortoise towards extinction.
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They say they need this space as it is a national security issue? Hasn't their war killed enough?
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7 comments // Public Land Seizure for Military Bombing Range Threatens California Desert and Desert Tortoise

  • darkhorsejim
    • 0
      darkhorsejim  
    • How much land does our gov't need for no other reason than: in the name of defense/war. After checking an atlas, I can't believe how many western states have had enourmous tracts of land developed as military bases & ranges for weapons testing. No wonder our military spending is one of the biggest chunks of our nat'l budget .

    • 3 years ago
  • csmonut
    • 0
      csmonut  
    • There were two desert tortoises that used to wander through my property in southern NV. Now there is only one.
      Developers look on them as an animal to be killed so they won't have to get "held up" while the tortoise is removed to another part of the desert.

    • 3 years ago
  • csmonut
    • 0
      csmonut  
    • They already have a bombing/live fire range near Baker, CA!
      What in the hell they need this for?
      National security, my ass!

    • 3 years ago
  • onechance
    • 0
      onechance  
    • Oh perfect. That's just what the world needs. More shit blown up. More bombs, more guns. You filthy warmongers ought to be ashamed.

    • 3 years ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • My question is: Why are they doing this training? I am sick of of their warmongering paranoid rhetoric. How much is this costing the taxpayers not only in dollars but in biodiversity? 365,906 acres! And people think putting up solar panels there is a threat?

    • 3 years ago
  • cibalin
  • queenofit
    • 0
      queenofit  
    • Well this sound a little like what Blackwater tried to do. Those Californian's did take too well and organized one hell of fight and WON!

      Here is a little on it, but this sounds so familiar

      SAN DIEGO—Military security contractor Blackwater Worldwide has pulled its plans to build a training facility in a remote area about 45 miles east of San Diego.

      Company project manager Brian Bonfiglio said in a letter submitted Friday to the San Diego County planning department that the site near the small community of Potrero no longer meets Blackwater's business needs.

      "After examining the capacity of our existing facilities and our business development goals, we have decided not to pursue plans for a training campus in Potrero," Bonfiglio wrote.

      The company had planned to convert a former chicken ranch into a camp that would host weeklong training courses for law enforcement and military personnel. The initial proposal for Blackwater West included 11 firing ranges, a driving track and a helipad in a valley tucked into rocky desert mountains.[...]
      The company had said the Potrero camp would be an ideal complement to its headquarters in Moyock, and a satellite training center in Mount Carroll, Ill., about 150 miles west of Chicago. The site is a short drive from San Diego and its array of military bases and federal law-enforcement field offices—including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol.

      bla bla bla.....

      anyway, there isn't an end in sight to this, and doubtful any new administration that is up for the goodies, will do anything to hold this type of careless behavior in check.

      thanks for the posting.

      knowledge is power

    • 3 years ago
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