A Conservation Strategy for the Northern Spotted Owl

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A Conservation Strategy for the Northern Spotted Owl

Report of the Interagency Scientific Committee To Address the Conservation of the Northern Spotted Owl.

The Interagency Scientific Committee to Address the Conservation of the Northern Spotted Owl (hereafter the Committee) was established under the authority of an interagency agreement between the, USDA Forest Service, USDI Bureau of Land Management, USDI Fish and Wildlife Service, and USDI National Park Service. The Committee’s charter was signed by the agency heads and subsequently incorporated into Section 318 of Public Law 101-1 21 in October 1989. The Committee was asked to develop a scientifically credible conservation strategy for the northern spotted owl in the United States.

Since that time, the Committee has reviewed the literature on the northern spotted owl, heard presentations from most of the scientists doing research on spotted owls, considered the concerns of numerous interest groups, and conducted field trips in Washington, Oregon, and northern California to examine the owl’s habitat. We have also interviewed dozens of biologists and land managers. Much of the attention directed toward this bird stems from a growing debate over managing old-growth forests on Federal lands, and from a concern about protecting biodiversity. We understand the significance of these larger issues, but we have kept to our mandate to develop a conservation strategy specifically for the northern spotted owl.

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The Oregon Fish and Wildlife Office is part of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Ecological Services program. We work closely with partners to conserve fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats throughout Oregon for future generations.
Program
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Species
Northern spotted owl

ESA status: threatened (June 1990)

The northern spotted owl is the largest of three subspecies of spotted owls, and inhabits structurally complex forests from southwestern British Columbia, through Washington and Oregon, and into northern California. The northern...

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