[va-richmond-general] Re: WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT THE 400 BLACK VULTURES TO BE SHOT AT HENRICUS PARK

  • From: "Jim Blowers" <jimvb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <va-richmond-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2005 18:21:51 -0500

Combine this with what Irene has been saying. Irene says that the litter
that people scatter through the area attracts the birds. Then Dale says that
every year they come out and shoot all the birds. Suck all the black
vultures into one area, then shoot them all. This is a good recipe for
making the birds extinct.

 

Anne and I will try to do something about this, probably fax, phone, and
email these people.

 

Jim Blowers

 

  _____  

From: va-richmond-general-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:va-richmond-general-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Dawn Wilson
Sent: Tuesday, 2005 December 13 14:52
To: va-richmond-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [va-richmond-general] WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT THE 400 BLACK VULTURES
TO BE SHOT AT HENRICUS PARK

 

Hi all.

Here's what you can do to dissuade this massive killing:

 

1) Call US House Rep Bob Goodlatte- he's the Agriculture Committee chairman:
202-225-5431  Leave a message if you can and/or ask to speak to the
agricultural legislative assistant.  I think his name is Bill Embergemo
(spelling?)-- or you can ask the operator for the agriculture assistant,
she'll transfer you to him.  Faxes are great too; Goodlatte's fax # is
202-225-9681.

 

2) Call Congressman Warner and ask to talk to the environmental or
agricultural legislative assistant:  202-224-2023  Her name is Lina Malosofy
(sp?).   Warner's fax # is 202-224-5432.

 

3) Call Congressman Allen and do the same.  Phone is 202-224-4024 and fax is
202-224-5432.

 

4) Please email me if you can "for sure" attend a pro test I'm trying to
organize.  If we can get something together, an interested reporter from our
local media said she'll show up.  That will be good press for the issue at
hand.

 

Say that you are oppose the permit that USDA granted to USFWS to bait and
kill black vultures at Henricus Park and Dutch Gap Area in Chesterfield
County.  Especially for Goodlatte, ask him to use his influence.  According
to the naturalist at Henricus Park, black vultures have been being shot
there for the past three summers and each time it has been about 400 birds.
USFWS staff bait them into cages with carion then shoot them.  In addition
to wildlife conservation reasons, tell them that you also oppose your tax
money paying for this.  Black vultures are endemic to the area and seem to
like Henricus Park in particular.  Killing them over the past three years
has done nothing to sway them from the area, s o USFWS has to come back
every year to kill more.  It's ridiculous.  There has been no research done
about the impact removing so many birds may have on the black vulture
population of Virginia.  

 

Several prominent bird conservation organations have petitioned USDA and
USFWS- unfortunately to no avail.  This morning, I spoke with the Director
of Conservation Advocacy of the American Bird Conservancy regarding this
issue and he emailed me a copy of a letter that ABC, Nat'l Audubon,
Defenders of Wildlife, etc. wrote to USFWS Director, Dale Hall about the
black vultures.  Here it is:

 

October 12, 2005

 

 

Honorable Dale Hall

 Director

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

1849 C Street, NW 

Washington , D.C. 20240 

 

Dear Director Hall: 

 

This letter is to express our serious concerns over the decision by the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, Region 5 to amend the MBTA Federal Fish and
Wildlife permit to allow USDA/APHIS/Wildlife Services--Virginia to kill an
additional 500 Black Vultures and to remove the original permit's
prohibition against using bait to lure birds into gun or trap range. The
current permit (unamended ), issued by FWS on April 8, 2005, permitted the
take of 300 Black and 300 Turkey Vultures by Wildlife Services-Virginia, but
only when causing damage to personal property and without the use of bait.

 

On December 4, 2004, our concerns were detailed to Ms. Sherry Morgan and
others at Region 5 in the attached letter contesting the science used and
the underlying rationale for the continued killing of vultures in Virginia.
That letter was sent by American Bird Conservancy, National Audubon Society,
Virginia Society of Ornithology, Raptor Research Foundation, Fairfax Audubon
Society, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, and Dr. Jim Fraser, Professor of Wildlife
Science, Virginia Tech University. The letter addre ssed the Amendment to
the EA done by Wildlife Services on their Vulture Damage Management Program
in Virginia. The Humane Society of the United States also submitted comments
in a separate letter expressing many of the same concerns. 

 

Why did the U.S. FWS accede to the permitee and change the terms of the
permit and its conditions? The April 8, 2005 permit was issued only after
thorough review and staff discussions at Region 5 and with input from
interested individuals and groups, including the applicant, Wildlife
Services-Virginia. The permit runs until March 31, 2006. 

 

The lethal take of vultures by WS in Virginia has increased from none in
1993, 1995, 1996, and 1997; 9 in 1998; 20 in 1999; 104 in 2000; 159 in 2001;
562 in 2002; 144 in 2003; and 276 in 2004. Under the amended permit, 1,100
vultures may be taken, 800 Black and 300 Turkey Vultures. These birds can be
baited, trapped and killed, regardless of whether they were causing damage
to personal property. This represents nearly a 

 

 

Page 2 Director Hall  October 12, 2005

 

doubling of the highest previous yearly take level and a reversal of the
original permit restrictions. 

 

We request that the U.S. FWS provide us with the scientific basis for
amending the MBTA vulture take permit and the justification for allowing the
trapping and killing of up to 1,100 vultures in Virginia d uring the permit
period of less than a year. 

 

We also request an explanation for under what authority WS-Virginia killed
vultures from July 1, 2003 to July 12, 2004. We believe this take was
illegal as the FWS permit expired on June 30, 2003 and WS-Virginia did not
have another valid FWS MBTA permit authorizing vulture take during this
period. WS-Virginia killed at least 300 vultures during this period without
a permit. 

Wildlife Services-Virginia continued to take vultures without any authority
until notified by FWS Region 5 in July 2004 that such take should s top. 

 

On July 13, 2004, FWS issued an MBTA permit to Wildlife Services-Virginia
allowing only emergency take where the birds were posing a direct threat to
human health or safety and requiring notification of the FWS within three
days of any take. That permit was dated July 8, 2004 effective July 12, 2004
through June 30, 2005. The permit was in effect until the current permit
dated April 8, 2005 was issued. It is our understanding that WS-VA did not
take vultures under the permit from July 2004 to April 7, 2005. 

 

Our letter to FWS Region 5 of December 4, 2004 detailed objections to the
Vulture Damage Management Program in Virginia by such reviewers and
signatories as Dr. Jim Fraser and Dr. Keith Bildstein, raptor specialists
who have studied and published peer reviewed research on vultures. Also,
signatories included Dr. Steve Sheffield, Chair of the Conservation
Committee of the Raptor Research Foundation, and Dr. Greg Butcher, Director
of Bird Conservation for National Audubon, another ornithologist. 

 

We would specifically request that our concerns over vulture take in
Virginia be addressed and that the U.S. FWS respond to these inquiries: 

 

1. Dr. Michael Avery, a respected Wildlife Services researcher, advised
Martin Lowney, WS-VA, that the strategy employed at Dutch Gap, Virginia
where most take of vultures has occurred, seems "to offer at best only a
temporary respite from the damage." Dr. Avery detailed vulture management
recommendations for this facility, advising that the WS-VA killing of
vultures to control the local population has and will continue to fail. How
was such expert advice considered and reviewed in granting the amendments to
the permit? Why did FWS fail to require that before any take of vultures
could occur at Dutch Gap that WS-VA follow their own expert's advice to:

 a. Alter the site to make it unappealing to vultures; 

 

 

Page 3 Director Hall  October 12, 2005

 

 

b. Harass vultures at the site;

c. Engage in Roost dispersal; and

d. Use carcasses and effigies as detailed in Tillman, E.A. Humphrey, Avery,
Use of vulture Carcasses and Effigies to Reduce Vulture Damage to Property
and Agriculture, Proc. 20th Vertebr. Pest Conf. (2002) and in the USDA/APHIS
Florida NWRC research project, "Development of methods to manage depredation
and nuisance problems caused by vultures" started in October 1999. (see:
http://www.aphis.usda.gov/ws/nwrc/research/vultures/vulture_previous.html). 

 

2. With such effective non-lethal methods for vulture damage management, why
did FWS issue amendments to the vulture take permit to bait, trap, and kill
as many as 1,100 vultures? 

 

3. At Dutch Gap, WS-VA baits vultures with a trap with deer carcasses. This
method attracts vultures from the surrounding area, including Turkey and
Black Vu ltures, that have not caused any property damage. How can such
baiting and killing be justified? 

 

4. Did the FWS consider and analyze the beneficial ecological impacts of
vultures? While the WS EA goes to great lengths to document damage caused by
vultures, and mentions public health concerns from vultures, scant attention
is devoted to the positive role vultures play in disease control and carrion
removal. WS EA's have made isolated references to the proposition that
peer-reviewed publications mention that vultures eliminate some potential
infectious sources by consuming dead infected animals. This disease control
benefit from vultures consuming carrion and the benefits of carcass removal
are importa nt issues deserving more focus by WS and FWS, especially since
WS-VA cites the protection of human health in Virginia as one of the reasons
for Vulture Damage Management.. Has FWS made or considered such benefits
before issuing a permit for the take of 1,100 vultures?

 

5. We understand FWS required some further clarity by WS-VA on population
impacts from the killing of vultures in Virginia. We must again note that
USDA/Wildlife researcher Dr. Michael Avery has advised WS-VA that "There are
no reliable population estimates for either turkey or black vultures." Even
if WS-VA could provide valid population data and impact projections from
killing 1,100 a year, the justification for such take is still lacking. Can
FWS detail the scientific basis for assessing vulture populations and the
impacts on continued lethal take? 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Page 4 Director Hall  October 12, 2005

 

 

We would appreciate a prompt response because of the swift reversal in
amending the permit and nearly acceding to the WS-VA original request for
the take of 1,000 Black an d 300 Turkey Vultures, without the restrictions
FWS had wisely required. You should be aware that Wildlife Services has
significantly escalated the killing of vultures nationwide, hence our
concerns. 

 

 

 

Thank you for your attention to this matter

 

Sincerely, 

 

 

Perry Plumart

Director of Conservation Advocacy

American Bird Conservancy

1731 Connecticut Avenue, NW

Washington, DC 20009

 

 

Greg Butcher, Ph. D.

Director of Bird Conservation 

National Audubon Society 
1150 Connecticut Avenue NW, Suite 600 
Washington DC 20036

 

 

John Spahr

President

Virginia Society of Ornithology

234 West Frederick Street 

Staunton, VA 24401

 

 

Steve Sheffield, Ph.D.

Chairman, Conservation Committee

 Raptor Research Foundation 

Affiliate Professor, Department of Environmental Science and Policy 

George Mason University 

4400 University Dr. 

Fairfax, VA 22030 

 

 

 

 

 

Page 5 Director Hall  October 12, 2005

 

 

Keith L. Bildstein, Ph. D.

Sarkis Acopian Director of Conservation Science

Acopian Center for Conservation Learning

Hawk Mountain Sanctuary

410 Summer Valley Road

< FONT face="Times New Roman">Orwigsburg, PA USA 17961

 

 

Caroline Kennedy

 Director of Conservation Initiatives

Defenders of Wildlife 

1130 17th Street, NW

Washington, DC 20036

 

 

Jim Fraser, Ph. D.

Professor of Wildlife Science 

Virginia Tech University 

Blacksburg, Virginia 24061-0321

 

 

Deblyn Flack

Member, Board of Directors

The Audubon Society of Northern Virginia

4022 Hummer Road

Annandale, VA 22003

 

 

John Hadidian, Ph.D. 

Director

Urban Wildlife Programs 

The Humane Society of the United States 

2100 L Street, NW 

Washington, DC 20037

 

 

  _____  

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