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Report: Skeeters Target WYO Sage Grouse

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Thursday, June 5, 2008   

Laramie, WY - West Nile virus season is about to get underway, and Wyoming residents are being warned to try to avoid being bitten by the mosquitoes that carry the illness. But wild creatures targeted by the newly-flourishing bugs don't have much in the way of defenses, and a new study from the University of Montana shows sage grouse in the Wyoming Powder River Basin may not have a fighting chance against them.

Wildlife biologist Erik Molvar, with the Biodiversity Conservation Alliance, says sage grouse in the area are at a higher risk of death because coalbed methane development has pushed them into small pockets of habitat.

"When the populations are fragmented and isolated like that, a disease outbreak like West Nile virus can wipe out the isolated populations. And that's what we're starting to see."

Molvar explains that the West Nile virus risk for sage grouse, and people, was something nobody could have predicted for the area, and he worries that more surprises could be on the way.

"When you take a healthy ecosystem and you start tinkering with it by introducing a major industrial landscape-altering change, you're going to get all kinds of problems that are unexpected."

Molvar says the area only recently has become a mosquito haven. The land was historically dry until coalbed development led to the creation of reservoirs and ponds to hold wastewater, in which, he says, mosquitoes thrive. While some say sage grouse numbers naturally rise and fall regardless of human actions, the birds are being considered for Endangered Species listing.


More information on the efforts of the Biodiversity Conservation Alliance is available online at
www.voiceforthewild.org.


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