This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-03-803 entitled 'Endangered Species: Fish and Wildlife Service Uses Best Available Science to Make Listing Decisions, but Additional Guidance Needed for Critical Habitat Designations' which was released on September 29, 2003. This text file was formatted by the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part of a longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. 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Report to Congressional Requesters: August 2003: ENDANGERED SPECIES: Fish and Wildlife Service Uses Best Available Science to Make Listing Decisions, but Additional Guidance Needed for Critical Habitat Designations: GAO-03-803: GAO Highlights: Highlights of GAO-03-803 a report to congressional requesters Why GAO Did This Study: Recent concerns about the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (Service) endangered species listing and critical habitat decisions have focused on the role that “sound science” plays in the decision-making process— whether the Service bases its decisions on adequate scientific data and properly interprets those data. In this report, GAO assesses the extent to which (1) the Service’s policies and practices ensure that listing and critical habitat decisions are based on the best available science and (2) external reviewers support the scientific data and conclusions that the Service used to make those decisions. In addition, GAO highlights the nature and extent that litigation is affecting the Service’s ability to effectively manage its critical habitat program. What GAO Found: The Endangered Species Act requires the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to identify, or “list,” species that are at risk of extinction and provide for their protection. The act also generally requires the Service to designate critical habitat—habitat essential to a species’ conservation—for each listed species. The Service must use the best available science when making listing and critical habitat decisions. The Service’s policies and practices generally ensure that listing and critical habitat decisions are based on the best available science. The Service consults with experts and considers information from federal and state agencies, academia, other stakeholders, and the general public. Decisions are subject to external “peer review” and extensive internal review to help ensure that decisions are based on the best available science and conform to contemporary scientific principles. External reviews indicate that the Service’s listing and critical habitat decisions generally have scientific support, but concerns over the adequacy of critical habitat determinations remain. Listing decisions are often characterized as straightforward, and experts, peer reviewers, and others generally support the science behind these decisions. Critical habitat designations, on the other hand, are more complex and often require additional scientific and nonscientific information. As a result, peer reviewers often expressed concern about the specific areas designated, while other experts expressed concerns about the adequacy of the data available to make designations. The Service’s critical habitat program has been characterized by frequent litigation. Specifically, the Service has lost a series of legal challenges that will require significant resources for the next 5 fiscal years to respond to court orders and settlement agreements for designating critical habitat. As a result, the Service is unable to focus resources on activities it believes provide more protection to species than designating critical habitat. While the Service recognizes that it has lost control of the program, it has yet to offer a remedy. Without taking proactive steps to clarify the role of critical habitat and how and when it should be designated, the Service will continue to have difficulty effectively managing the program. What GAO Recommends: Because the Service’s critical habitat program faces serious challenges, including potential legal challenges and questions regarding the role of critical habitat in species conservation, GAO is recommending that the Service provide clear strategic direction for the critical habitat program, in a specified time frame, by identifying the issues affecting the Service’s ability to effectively manage the program and recommending policy/guidance, regulatory, and/ or legislative changes necessary to address these issues. www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-803. To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on the link above. For more information, contact Barry T. Hill at (202) 512-3841 or hillbt@gao.gov. [End of section] Contents: Letter: Results in Brief: Background: Procedures Are in Place to Ensure That Listing and Critical Habitat Decisions Are Based on the Best Available Science: Peer Reviewers and Others Conclude that Most Listing Decisions Are Based on Best Available Science, but Concerns about Critical Habitat Decisions Remain: The Service Has Failed to Address Known Problems with the Critical Habitat Program: Conclusion: Recommendation for Executive Action: Agency Comments: Appendixes: Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: Appendix II: Overview of The Endangered Species Act: Listing Species as Endangered or Threatened: Critical Habitat: Recovery Plans: Consultations with Federal Agencies: Habitat Conservation Plans: Appendix III: Peer Reviewers' Responses to Listing and Critical Habitat Decisions for Fiscal Years 1999 through 2002: Appendix IV: The Nature of Scientific Controversy Surrounding Listing and Critical Habitat Decisions: Listing: Critical Habitat: Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: GAO Contact: Staff Acknowledgments: Table: Table 1: Species Delisted on the Basis of New Information: Figures: Figure 1: Number of Domestic Species Listed as Threatened or Endangered, 1981 through 2002: Figure 2: Number of Domestic Species with Critical Habitat, 1981 through 2002: Figure 3: The Service's Process to List Species as Threatened or Endangered: Figure 4: Peer Review Response Rates for Listing and Critical Habitat Decisions, Fiscal Years 1999 through 2002: Figure 5: Canada lynx: Figure 6: California red-legged frog: Figure 7: Southwestern willow flycatcher: Letter August 29, 2003: The Honorable Bob Goodlatte Chairman, Committee on Agriculture House of Representatives: The Honorable Scott McInnis Chairman, Subcommittee on Forests and Forest Health Committee on Resources House of Representatives: The Honorable Richard Pombo Chairman, Committee on Resources House of Representatives: The Congress enacted the Endangered Species Act in 1973 to protect plant and animal species whose survival is in jeopardy. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) is responsible for implementing the act for freshwater and land species.[Footnote 1] For many years, the act, its implementation, and the Service have served as lightning rods in the ongoing national debate concerning the tradeoffs between economic, social, and environmental values. The act requires the Service to list as endangered any species facing extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range and to list as threatened any species likely to become endangered in the foreseeable future. The Service must make decisions to list species solely on the basis of the best available scientific and commercial data, such as biological or trade data obtained from commercial publications. The act also generally requires the Service to designate critical habitat--habitat essential to a species' conservation--when listing a species; the loss of habitat is often the principal cause of species decline. For critical habitat decisions, the act again requires the Service to consider the best available scientific data, but also requires the Service to consider the economic impact and other relevant impacts of designating particular areas as critical habitat. The Service is also required to develop a plan to recover the listed species to the point that it is no longer threatened or endangered, an achievement marked by its removal, or delisting, from the list of threatened or endangered species. Recent concerns about the Service's listing and critical habitat decisions have focused on the role that "sound science" plays in the decision-making process and whether the Service bases its decisions on adequate scientific data and properly interprets those data. Critics of the decisions warn that improper listing and critical habitat decisions may cause social and economic disruption and divert funding and attention away from other species truly facing extinction. In addition to concerns about its use of science, the Service is having difficulty managing the listing and critical habitat programs, in part because of extensive litigation. Currently, the Service is experiencing a significant backlog of decisions to list species and to designate critical habitat. The Service has identified more than 200 species that qualify for listing but for which the listing process has not yet begun because of resource limitations or higher-priority actions being taken for other species. You asked us to assess the Service's consideration and use of science in its decisions to list species as threatened or endangered and to designate critical habitat. Specifically, we reviewed the extent to which (1) the Service's policies and practices ensure that listing and critical habitat decisions are based on the best available science and (2) outside reviewers support the scientific data and conclusions that the Service uses to make listing and critical habitat decisions. In addition, in performing our work, we identified certain factors that could continue to affect the Service's ability to effectively manage its critical habitat program. Our report highlights the nature and extent of those problems as well. In meeting our objectives, we examined decision documents for the 101 listing and critical habitat decisions that the Service issued during fiscal years 1999 through 2002. There were 64 listing decisions and 37 critical habitat decisions covering 108 and 36 species, respectively. To evaluate the adequacy of the science used to support these decisions, we reviewed (1) the Service's policies, procedures, and practices for making listing and critical habitat decisions; (2) the responses of peer reviewers who commented on 79 listing and critical habitat actions; and (3) judicial decisions related to listing and critical habitat actions decided during fiscal years 1999 through 2002. We also interviewed staff at seven field and regional offices and at Service headquarters to help understand the Service's decision-making process. We interviewed individuals with academic, industry, and conservation organizations and the National Academy of Sciences to better understand why some of the Service's decisions are controversial. In this report, we define "science" as the collection and interpretation of biological information, such as identification of the species and its habitat needs. At no point in our review did we attempt to directly evaluate the scientific analysis on which the Service based its listing and critical habitat decisions. A more detailed description of our scope and methodology is presented in appendix I. Results in Brief: The Service's policies and practices generally ensure that listing and critical habitat decisions are based on the best available science. In making listing and critical habitat decisions, the Service consults with experts both inside and outside the federal government and considers studies or other data from federal and state agencies, other stakeholders, and the general public. Both proposed decisions and final decisions are subject to internal review at field, regional, and headquarters offices to help ensure that the professional judgment is sound and conforms to contemporary scientific theories and principles. In addition, the Service also has a policy to ask at least three independent scientific experts in a relevant field to "peer review" proposed decisions to list species or designate critical habitat to help ensure that decisions are based on the best available science. Reviews by outside experts and others indicate that the Service's listing and critical habitat decisions are generally based on the best available science, but that there are concerns over the adequacy of the data used to support critical habitat designations. For listing decisions, peer reviewers overwhelmingly supported the science behind the decisions the Service issued between fiscal years 1999 and 2002. Additionally, during that same time period, the courts overturned few listing decisions because the Service relied on faulty or inadequate science. Further evidence that listing decisions are scientifically sound is provided by the fact that only 10 of the more than 1,200 domestic listed species have been delisted after new scientific information surfaced that indicated the original listing was not warranted. In contrast, while external reviews indicate that most critical habitat decisions are based on the best available science, experts and others we spoke to expressed concerns over the adequacy of the information available to support the designations. While peer reviewers generally agreed with the science supporting the Service's critical habitat decisions, they often also provided suggestions for modifying the designations. In three decisions, peer reviewers disagreed with the Service's designation of critical habitat, stating that the Service had insufficient information to make the decision. Although the Service has frequently lost legal challenges over its critical habitat designations, courts have overturned few of the Service's critical habitat decisions as not supported by the best available science. Instead, most of the challenges dealt with nonscience issues, such as the Service's failure to designate habitat for a listed species. Key court decisions have invalidated certain practices adopted by the Service, causing its critical habitat program to be dominated by litigation. In 1997, the Service lost a lawsuit challenging its practice of not designating critical habitat for many species; the Service did not designate critical habitat because it believes it conveys little additional protection to listed species. This suit led to numerous other suits, resulting in court orders directing the Service to designate critical habitat for many previously listed species. In 1999, the Service announced that its system for designating critical habitat was not working and that critical habitat litigation and related court orders were consuming much of the program's resources. To remedy the situation, the Service announced its intention to develop guidance and/or regulations to clarify the role of critical habitat in endangered species conservation and to streamline the process used to designate critical habitat. However, such guidance and clarification were never issued, and the Service continues to follow the same system that it recognizes is unworkable. In 2001, the Service lost another lawsuit, which challenged the adequacy of the economic analyses the Service used to support its critical habitat designations. These two lawsuits, and subsequent legal challenges based on similar issues, have come to dominate the Service's critical habitat program. In 2002, we reported on problems facing the critical habitat program and recommended that the Service expedite its efforts to issue guidance for the program; however, the Service has yet to do so.[Footnote 2] If the Service does not take proactive steps to clarify the role of critical habitat and how and when it should be designated, we believe it will continue to have difficulty effectively managing the program. Therefore, we recommend that the Service--through guidance, regulations, or other policy tools--provide clear strategic direction for the critical habitat program in order to provide the greatest conservation benefit to threatened and endangered species in the most cost-effective manner. The Department of the Interior did not respond to our request to comment on the recommendation. Background: The Congress enacted the Endangered Species Act in 1973 to conserve threatened or endangered plant and animal species. The act requires the Service to base its determination of whether a species is endangered or threatened solely on the basis of the best available scientific and commercial data.[Footnote 3] Available data includes biological or trade data obtained from scientific or commercial publications, administrative reports, maps or other graphic materials, or experts on the subject. Using the best available data, the act requires the Service to determine whether a species should be listed as threatened or endangered by analyzing its status based on the following five factors:[Footnote 4] * present or threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of a species habitat or range; * overuse for commercial, recreational, scientific, or educational purposes; * disease or predation; * inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; or: * other natural or manmade factors affecting a species' continued existence. As of June 2003, the Service had listed 1,263 species in the United States as threatened or endangered. This total included 517 animal species and 746 plant species.[Footnote 5] The number of species listed per year has varied considerably, as shown in figure 1. There are also 558 foreign species listed as threatened or endangered. Figure 1: Number of Domestic Species Listed as Threatened or Endangered, 1981 through 2002: [See PDF for image] Note: There have been 25 domestic species delisted since the inception of the act. These species are not included in the figure. In addition, 16 species have been reclassified from endangered to threatened. [End of figure] As of June 2003, the Service was in the process of listing 36 more species and had identified 251 species as candidates for listing. The act also requires the Service to designate critical habitat for listed species. Critical habitat is a specific geographic area that is essential for the conservation of a threatened or endangered species and that may require special management and protection.[Footnote 6] As of June 2003, 417 domestic species had critical habitat designated. The number of critical habitat designations per year has varied considerably, as shown in figure 2. Figure 2: Number of Domestic Species with Critical Habitat, 1981 through 2002: [See PDF for image] Note: Some species may have had critical habitat designated more than one time; the graph includes only the first time that critical habitat was designated. [End of figure] The Endangered Species Act has provisions to protect and recover species once they are listed. The act prohibits the "taking" of listed animal species by any party--federal or nonfederal.[Footnote 7] "Taking" or "take" means to harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect a listed species.[Footnote 8] Also, federal agencies must ensure that their activities, or any activities they fund, permit, or license, do not jeopardize the continued existence of a listed species or result in the destruction or adverse modification of its critical habitat. The act establishes a process for federal agencies to consult with the Service about their activities that may affect listed species. In addition, the act requires that the Service develop a recovery plan to reverse the decline of each listed species and ensure its long-term survival. A recovery plan may include a variety of methods and procedures to recover listed species, such as protective measures to prevent extinction or further decline, habitat acquisition and restoration, and other on-the-ground activities for managing and monitoring endangered and threatened species. To date, seven domestic species have been delisted due to recovery. (App. II provides additional information on the process used by the Service to protect listed species.): Procedures Are in Place to Ensure That Listing and Critical Habitat Decisions Are Based on the Best Available Science: The Endangered Species Act requires the Service to use the best available scientific data when deciding to list species or designate critical habitat. The "best available" standard does not obligate the Service to conduct studies to obtain missing data, but it prohibits the Service from ignoring available data. The Service goes through an extensive series of procedural steps that involves public participation and review by outside experts to help ensure that it collects relevant data and uses it appropriately. Although the process alone is not sufficient to ensure the accuracy of the Service's listing and critical habitat decisions, it generally ensures that the Service is using and considering the "best available" data. Internal Decision-Making Process Helps Ensure That the Service Uses Best Available Science in Making Decisions: The Service follows a rigorous process in listing a species as endangered or threatened, designating critical habitat, or removing a species from the endangered and threatened list. The Service's process includes following a rulemaking procedure, established by the Endangered Species Act, supported by additional procedures under Service regulations and guidance. The complete text of the proposed and final rules and related information (including a summary of data on which the proposal is based and a summary of comments received on the proposal) are published in the Federal Register, the government's official publication for making public the regulations and legal notices issued by federal agencies. The act and regulations require the Service to provide an opportunity for public participation in the rulemaking process, notify affected states and local jurisdictions and invite comments from them and other interested parties, notify newspapers and professional journals, and hold at least one public hearing, if requested, within 45 days of publishing the proposal. Additionally, Service procedures provide for listing and critical habitat decisions to be reviewed internally to help ensure that the professional judgment that the Service's scientists exercise when weighing and interpreting the collected data is sound and conforms to contemporary scientific theories and principles.[Footnote 9] The process to list a species begins either through a petition from an individual, group, or state agency or through the initiative of the Service (see fig. 3).[Footnote 10] Figure 3: The Service's Process to List Species as Threatened or Endangered: [See PDF for image] [End of figure] When a petition is filed to list a species, the Service provides a copy of the petition to, and requests information from, appropriate state agencies and affected tribal governments. The Service uses the information that it receives from these parties (or that which is contained in the petition or otherwise readily available) to make its initial determination as to whether a species may be threatened or endangered, and if so, to proceed with data gathering and analysis.[Footnote 11] The act requires the Service to make this determination generally within 90 days of receiving the petition. If the Service determines that it should proceed, it conducts a "status review"--a review of all the available information on a species--to determine whether the species warrants protection under the act. To conduct the status review, the Service solicits comments and requests information from the general public (by publishing a notice in the Federal Register) and contacts affected local, state, tribal and federal agencies; interested conservation or industry groups; and scientific organizations or professionals interested in and/or knowledgeable about the species. The Service may also fund field surveys, museum research, and literature searches in order to compile available information. Service scientists who conduct status reviews told us that they often work closely with experts from other government agencies, academia, and elsewhere to help gather and interpret information. In some instances, the Service initiates a review of a species without a petition, for which it conducts a candidate assessment--similar to a status review--to identify available information. Within 12 months of receiving a petition for which the Service proceeded with a status review, the Service must determine whether the species' listing is warranted. If a Service field office makes an initial determination that the listing is warranted, it prepares a proposed rule for publication in the Federal Register. Before the proposed rule is published, a draft receives considerable internal review by officials in the Service's field, regional, and headquarters offices.[Footnote 12] The review by officials in the field and regional offices helps ensure the exercise of sound professional judgment. The field office that is responsible for the listing provides the appropriate regional office with the draft of the proposed rule and all supporting scientific information. Officials in the regional office review the proposed rule to ensure that scientific information supports the proposed rule. Regions are responsible for ensuring that the proposed rule is scientifically accurate and biologically and legally sound. Regional officials told us that the review is an opportunity for the region to identify information gaps and issues concerning how the information supports the conclusions. At the Service's headquarters, the draft proposed rule is reviewed to ensure that it is consistent with other listing rules and complies with national policies. Either the Director of the Fish and Wildlife Service or the Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks approves all proposed rules before publication. Upon publication, the public has at least 60 days to provide comments on a proposed rule. The Service may extend the public comment period and/or reopen it at a later date. Service officials told us that the public comment period is an opportunity to reach biologists, scientists, academicians, and advocacy groups that the Service may not have contacted previously. The Service also holds public hearings, if requested. At the end of the public comment period, the Service reevaluates all the data, including the comments received since the proposal was published, to determine whether the listing is still warranted. If not, the proposal will be withdrawn. The Service must publish its final decision within 12 months of its proposal. In cases when experts disagree on the accuracy or sufficiency of the available data concerning the proposed listing, or the release of additional information that may affect the outcome of the petition is expected, the proposal may be extended 6 months beyond the normal 12-month time frame. In the event that the listing is warranted, the Service prepares a final rule, incorporating appropriate changes based on the information received during the comment period. Final rules are subject to the same internal review process as proposed rules and are approved by either the Director of the Fish and Wildlife Service or Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks before being published. The procedures for designating critical habitat are similar to those for listing a species. However, in designating critical habitat, the Service must also take into consideration the economic and other impacts of specifying any particular area as critical habitat. The Assistant Secretary of Fish and Wildlife and Parks approves critical habitat designations. Officials at all levels of the agency demonstrated familiarity with the requirements of the review process and stated that they believe it provides the general guidelines necessary to ensure the best available data are identified and properly interpreted. Field office officials noted that proposed and final rules are challenged internally to ensure they can withstand public scrutiny and that while rulemakings are initiated at the field level, extensive review ensures that the entire agency is on board before anything is finalized. Scientists and other agency personnel told us that they use the process to test the validity of their listing and critical habitat decisions. Some officials emphasized the crucial role that the experience and expertise of the Service's scientists play in ensuring that listing and critical habitat decisions are based on the best available science. Outside Experts Review Proposed Rules: Peer review is considered to be the most reliable tool to ensure that quality science will prevail over social, economic, and political considerations in the development of a particular product or decision. Peer review--a routine component of science--can substantially enhance the quality and credibility of the scientific or technical basis for a decision. For regulatory decisions, peer review can provide for independent and expert analysis to complement the adversarial and political nature of rulemaking. While many federal agencies were already using peer review, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued guidance in 2002 recommending that federal agencies utilize formal, independent external peer review (peer review by individuals outside of the agency) to ensure the quality of data and analytic results disseminated to the public.[Footnote 13] It also recommended that peer reviewers be selected primarily on the basis of their technical expertise, that they disclose any source of bias (either prior technical or policy positions or sources of personal and institutional funding from which they may benefit), and that peer review be conducted in an open and rigorous manner.[Footnote 14] Federal agencies have adopted a variety of peer-review practices, depending on the nature of the product or decision under review. As we reported in 1999, peer-review practices at federal agencies vary according to their intended use and form.[Footnote 15] According to OMB's 2002 guidance, agencies should tailor the rigor and intensity of peer review in accordance with the significance of risk or management implications of the information involved. The form of peer review can range from informal consultations with agency colleagues not involved in the earlier stages of the project to formal external advisory panels, which can span several years and cost thousands of dollars. In addition, for each different form of peer review, there are multiple variations--the amount of time allocated for the review, the number of reviewers, and whether the review occurs internally or externally--all of which affect the overall time and cost required to conduct a review. In addition to its internal decision-making processes, the Service uses external peer review of listing and critical habitat decisions to ensure that the best biological and commercial information is being considered. The Service's peer-review policy requires officials to solicit the opinions of three appropriate and independent experts regarding scientific data and assumptions supporting listing and critical habitat decisions.[Footnote 16] Peer reviewers are selected at the discretion of the field office scientists responsible for developing listing and critical habitat decisions. The reviewers, who may come from the academic and scientific community, tribal and other Native American groups, federal and state agencies, and/or the private sector, are selected on the basis of their independence and expertise on the species being considered, similar species, the species' habitat, or other relevant subject matter. The Service's scientists may ask peer reviewers to critique specific aspects of the proposed rule, such as the Service's interpretation of a particular study, or they may ask reviewers to comment on the rule in its entirety. The Service's peer-review policy generally appears to be appropriate for the circumstances in which it is used. Although other agencies may use more rigorous forms of peer review, such as convening a peer-review panel or a science advisory board, the Service's peer-review process allows the Service to make listing and critical habitat decisions under relatively short time frames (the Service usually asks peer reviewers to perform their review during the public comment period--normally 60 days--while a peer-review panel may span several months or years). However, to help ensure the identification of complete and current information on a species and its habitat, the Service may contact experts during the status review. In addition, any decisions that are issued as "final" rules can later be reconsidered as circumstances warrant or new information becomes available. In fact, a species can be delisted if new information surfaces indicating that the original decision to list was not warranted. One limitation that the Service faces in getting an independent review is the scarcity of experts on a particular species. For example, in some instances, the most qualified experts to peer review a decision may have authored some of the studies that the Service used to support its decision, forcing the Service to balance expertise with independence. However, according to a National Academy of Sciences report that reviewed the Environmental Protection Agency's use of peer review for similar actions, to choose an individual to peer review who is both an expert and independent might be impossible, or might not promote the best possible review.[Footnote 17] In such cases, an appropriate balance of views may be sought to ensure that different interpretations on the scientific and technical merit of a decision are taken into consideration. Such cases should, however, be fully disclosed. Other organizations have developed procedures for assessing the independence of peer reviewers, ranging from simply requiring peer reviewers to disclose any potential bias, to using third parties to identify peer reviewers based, in part, on their independence. Service officials told us that they have not adopted a formal procedure to assess peer reviewers' independence, and the Service does not publicly disclose in the Federal Register potential conflicts or prior involvement by its peer reviewers when the Service publishes the final rule. The Service generally complied with its peer-review policy of soliciting peer review from at least three reviewers during fiscal years 1999 through 2002. During this time, the Service solicited three or more peer reviewers in 94 out of the 100 listing and critical habitat decisions it made.[Footnote 18] In three instances the Service solicited fewer than three peer reviewers, and in three other instances documentation was unavailable to indicate how many reviewers were asked.[Footnote 19] (See app. III for a complete list of the decisions with the number of peer reviewers solicited, the number that responded, and how they responded.): While the Service generally complied with its policy to seek peer reviewers, reviewers often did not respond. As shown in figure 4, the Service received responses from three or more peer reviewers in 38 decisions for which it solicited at least three peer reviewers. It received either one or two responses in 41 decisions, and no responses in 15 decisions. Figure 4: Peer Review Response Rates for Listing and Critical Habitat Decisions, Fiscal Years 1999 through 2002: [See PDF for image] Note: Response rates are for the 94 decisions for which the Service solicited at least 3 peer reviewers. Overall, the Service asked 422 experts to peer review the 100 listing and critical habitat decisions made during fiscal years 1999 through 2002 and received 212 responses (50 percent response rate). [End of figure] Field office scientists, as well as an expert on peer review, reported a variety of reasons for the limited number of responses, including (1) the potential peer reviewers had busy schedules and felt constrained by the short time frames allotted to conduct the review, and (2) the potential reviewers were unwilling to conduct peer review either because they did not want to become involved in a controversial decision or because they did not want to work without compensation. In addition, the field office scientists reported that potential peer reviewers may not be inclined to conduct peer review because they found nothing to criticize or had already provided comments at an earlier stage of the decision, such as during the status review. Recognizing the importance of peer review, some regional and field offices have taken steps to increase the number of respondents. For example, some field offices contact potential peer reviewers in advance, rather than initiating contact just before the decision is open for peer review; others maintain communication with the peer reviewers throughout the process. For example, the Pacific Islands field office in Honolulu, Hawaii, has assigned an administrative staff person to initiate phone calls and E-mails to help remind and encourage peer reviewers to respond. This staff person also monitors the implementation of the peer-review policy and tracks results. In order to increase the likelihood that at least three peer reviewers respond to a request, some field offices request peer reviews from more than three individuals. Field office scientists suggested other ways to increase the response rate, such as providing monetary compensation, using a third party to select and coordinate peer review, narrowing the scope of the review, and providing more time for review. Peer Reviewers and Others Conclude that Most Listing Decisions Are Based on Best Available Science, but Concerns about Critical Habitat Decisions Remain: External reviews of listing and critical habitat decisions indicate that most decisions are generally scientifically supported, but concerns about the adequacy of critical habitat determinations remain. Listing decisions are often characterized as straightforward, requiring the Service to answer only a "yes or no" question as to whether a species warrants inclusion on the threatened or endangered list. Critical habitat designations, on the other hand, are more complex and often require further information on the species' habitat requirements and other management considerations. Peer reviewers often expressed concerns about the specific areas designated as critical habitat, while other experts expressed concerns about the adequacy of the information available to make the designation. Little Scientific Disagreement Surrounds Listing Decisions: Experts and others have found most of the Service's listing decisions to be scientifically supported. Experts knowledgeable about the Endangered Species Act and recent studies assessing the Service's use of science in making listing decisions concur that the Service's listing decisions are generally supported. Similarly, experts not affiliated with the Service have peer-reviewed proposals to list species and overwhelmingly supported the Service's decisions. The courts have overturned few listing decisions on the basis of inadequate science, and the Service has delisted few species on the basis of new information that suggested that protection under the act was not originally warranted. Experts and Others Generally Support Service Listing Decisions: Experts, Service officials, and others knowledgeable about the Endangered Species Act largely agree that most listing decisions have been relatively straightforward and scientifically supported. Experts and others we spoke to generally agreed that most listed species probably deserved being listed under the current standard for best available scientific information. For example, several attorneys, who represent the regulated community in challenges to the Service's decisions, stated that, given the Service's short time frames and limited resources, the science used to support most listing decisions did not present a significant problem. However, these attorneys and others contend that the "best available data" standard does not provide enough certainty that a species is threatened or endangered and suggest that a more stringent standard should be developed. On the other hand, interested parties representing a diverse set of interests raised concerns that Service officials at the Headquarters level are succumbing to political pressures to not list species despite support from regional and field scientists who believe evidence shows that listing is warranted. Service scientists told us they believe many listed species have low populations and/or face clearly identified threats, indicating that the species are at risk. They said that many listing decisions have been made to protect species native to a specific area, with a narrow range, or for which substantial scientific information was already available or easy to collect. On the other hand, the scientists noted that collecting information becomes more difficult and costly when a wide-ranging species may be at risk. Additionally, several scientific disagreements regarding listing decisions have surfaced in recent years, mostly concerning whether the amount of information available at the time a decision is made suffices as a basis for a decision. (See app. IV for information on the nature of scientific controversy surrounding the Service's decisions to list species.) Finally, many of the experts we spoke with had concerns about the science used to support other aspects of the act, such as recovery actions or consultations with federal entities on proposed actions that could potentially harm a listed species. Several studies have supported the Service's use of science in making listing decisions. The Ecological Society of America--a professional society of ecologists representing ecological researchers in more than 60 countries--released a study on the use of science in achieving the goals of the act that concluded that the major problem with the listing process has been its slowness rather than the quality of the listing decisions.[Footnote 20] The National Research Council (NRC) reached similar conclusions in a 1995 report, finding that many of the conflicts and disagreements over the Endangered Species Act do not appear to be based on scientific issues.[Footnote 21] More recently, in 2002, NRC reviewed the genetic evidence used to support one particular listing decision, the listing of the Gulf of Maine Atlantic salmon distinct population segment.[Footnote 22] It concluded that Maine salmon are genetically distinct from other salmon, supporting the Service's decision to list the species. Peer Reviewers Overwhelmingly Support the Service's Use of Science in Making Listing Decisions: The Service received 143 peer-review responses for 54 of the 63 listing decisions finalized between fiscal years 1999 and 2002 and no responses for the remaining 9 decisions (see app. III). In 48 of these decisions, reviewers providing comments unanimously agreed with the Service's scientific conclusions or otherwise indicated support for the decision to list the species. In two decisions, the Service reported that one of the peer reviewer's opinions was "neutral," and the rest of the opinions were supportive. In two other decisions, we were unable to determine the nature of one of the peer reviewer's response. Peer reviewers disagreed with the Service in the following two decisions: * Alabama sturgeon. One of the five reviewers to provide comments on the proposal to list the Alabama sturgeon, a freshwater fish historically found throughout the Mobile River basin of Alabama and Mississippi, disagreed with the Service's proposed listing determination. While the reviewer did not directly respond to the Service's request for peer review, he did provide comments at one of the public hearings regarding the proposed rule. The reviewer argued that the Alabama sturgeon was not a valid species given the fish's morphological (i.e., physical appearance such as color pattern, shape, and scale patterns) and genetic evidence. The other four reviewers responding to the proposed rule supported the validity of the Alabama sturgeon as a species. * Desert yellowhead. One of two reviewers who provided comments on the proposed rule to list the desert yellowhead (a flowering plant that occurs in Wyoming) agreed that the species was rare and in need of protection, but did not agree that listing the species under the act was the appropriate mechanism. The other reviewer supported listing the plant. Courts Have Overturned Few Listing Decisions on the Basis of Inadequate Science: The Service's actions and inactions under the act are frequently challenged in the courts. In hearing such challenges, courts must defer to agencies in judging actions, such as listing decisions, and must not substitute their judgment for an agency's, especially on technical matters.[Footnote 23] As a result, courts will uphold an agency decision when it is evident that the agency considered the relevant facts and articulated a rational connection between those facts and its decision.[Footnote 24] Partly because of the deference granted to the Service in making listing determinations, most litigation has not directly challenged the Service's use of science. Instead, according to an official from the Department of the Interior's Office of the Solicitor, most litigation revolves around definitional or procedural issues, such as the Service's failure to meet statutory time frames. The official said that litigants often challenge decisions on nonscientific aspects of the act because they feel this provides them with a stronger case. Thus, the fact that the courts have rarely ruled against the Service on the basis of inadequate science is not necessarily an affirmation that the Service used the best available science. Based on a review of federal court cases decided during fiscal years 1999 through 2002, we identified 17 cases in which a court issued an opinion related to the Service's listing decisions. The Service lost 11 of these cases, mostly because it failed to take certain actions regarding decisions to list or not to list a species within the time allotted by the act. However, the courts overturned listing decisions on the basis of issues related to the use of scientific data in the following two cases: * Sacramento splittail. In 2000, a federal court ruled that the decision to list the Sacramento splittail was not supported by the best scientific data available.[Footnote 25] The splittail is a large fish with a distinctive tail and is native to California's Central Valley. Regional water authorities challenged the listing of the splittail on scientific grounds, asserting, among other things, that the Service ignored an important study indicating resiliency and an increasing abundance of the splittail. The court rejected the Service's arguments that these data were not submitted in time to be considered and were irrelevant, and found there to be no indication that the Service considered substantial evidence that suggested that the splittail should not be listed. The court thus concluded that the Service had failed to consider all available data. The Service is in the process of reevaluating this listing rule. * Westslope cutthroat trout. In 2002, a federal court ruled that the Service's decision not to list the Westslope cutthroat trout was not supported by the best scientific data available.[Footnote 26] The Westslope trout is one of 14 subspecies of cutthroat trout native to streams in the western United States. In its decision not to list the trout, the Service identified hybridization (the breeding with other species of trout) as one of the threats to the species, but included these hybrid fish in the population considered for listing. The court noted that if hybridization were a "threat" to the species, it would seem logical that hybrid fish should not be included in the population under consideration. After explaining that the identification of the existing population of the trout was vital to the ultimate listing determination, the court found that the record failed to offer a rationale for including hybrid stocks in the population that it considered for listing, and concluded that the Service had ignored existing scientific data for assessing the degree of hybridization that may be appropriate to include in the population. The court remanded the case to the Service for reconsideration. The Service lost the following two cases because it failed to assess whether the species was imperiled throughout "a significant portion of its range."[Footnote 27] * Flat-tailed horned lizard. In 2001, an environmental group successfully challenged the Service's decision not to list the flat- tailed horned lizard, a small lizard found in desert lands in the southwestern United States.[Footnote 28] In reaching its decision, the Service concluded that regardless of the threats to the lizard on private lands, large populations of the lizard and areas of its habitat were already protected under a conservation agreement on public lands and that the species was sufficiently protected from further threats. The court found that the Service should have performed an analysis to determine whether the private lands constituted "a significant portion of [the lizard's] range" and, if so, whether the lizard was or would become extinct in that area. The court remanded the case to the Service for those determinations. * Queen Charlotte goshawk. In 2002, an environmental group successfully challenged the Service's decision not to list the Queen Charlotte goshawk, a forest-dwelling bird of prey found throughout North America.[Footnote 29] In reaching its decision, the Service considered the goshawk's presence in southeast Alaska, the Queen Charlotte Islands, and Vancouver Island in Canada.[Footnote 30] The Service found that the goshawk was not threatened or endangered in southeast Alaska or the Queen Charlotte Islands, but the Service did not make a determination regarding the goshawk's status on Vancouver Island. The Service contended that the goshawk's status on Vancouver Island did not matter because that area did not represent a significant portion of the goshawk's range. The decision in this case upheld the Service's determination regarding southeast Alaska and the Queen Charlotte Islands, finding that the Service had properly used the best available science. However, the decision went on to conclude that Vancouver Island represented a significant portion of the goshawk's range and that the case should be remanded to the Service to determine whether the goshawk was threatened or endangered on Vancouver Island. The Service Has Delisted Few Species on the Basis of New Scientific Information Showing That Listing Was Not Warranted: In addition to removing recovered or extinct species from the list of threatened or endangered species, the Service can also delist a species if new information becomes available to show that protection under the act is not warranted. Typically, listing a species generates widespread attention to the species, additional funding for its study, and further research relating to the species or its habitat. As additional information is gathered, the Service or interested parties can initiate a delisting action if they believe the species no longer qualifies for listing. The Service follows similar rulemaking procedures to delist a species as for listing. Since the inception of the Endangered Species Act, the Service has delisted few species. As of March 2003, the Service had delisted 25 threatened and endangered domestic species of the more than 1,200 listed.[Footnote 31] Of the 25 delistings, 10 resulted from new information--4 because new information showed the species to be more widespread or abundant than believed at the time the species was listed, and 6 for taxonomic revisions, meaning that the species was found not to be unique, but was a hybrid or simply a population of another common species making it ineligible for listing (see table 1). The remaining 15 delistings resulted from recovery efforts (7), extinction (7), or an amendment to the act that made the species no longer qualify for listing protection (1).[Footnote 32] Table 1: Species Delisted on the Basis of New Information: Species name: Dismal Swamp southeastern shrew; Description: A small, long-tailed shrew found in the southeastern U.S; Date listed: Sept. 26, 1986; Date delisted: Feb. 28, 2000; Reason delisted: Species more abundant or widespread: Analyses completed after the species was listed showed that the species is actually widely distributed and uses a wide variety of habitat types. Species name: McKittrick pennyroyal; Description: A small herb native to the Guadalupe Mountains in southeastern New Mexico and northwestern Texas; Date listed: July 13, 1982; Date delisted: Sept. 22, 1993; Reason delisted: Species more abundant or widespread: Since the time of listing, additional surveys have shown the plant to be more widespread and abundant than previously known. Further, management actions were taken by various federal agencies to provide protections to the plant. Species name: Tumamoc globeberry; Description: A vine occurring in south-central Arizona and extending southward into Mexico; Date listed: Apr. 29, 1986; Date delisted: June 18, 1993; Reason delisted: Species more abundant or widespread: Surveys and studies completed after the time of the listing showed that the range of the species is much larger than originally known and the plant was more common and requires less habitat-specific areas than was believed at the time of listing. Species name: Pine barrens treefrog, Florida population; Description: A frog known to occur in Florida, Alabama, New Jersey, and the Carolinas; Date listed: Nov. 11, 1977; Date delisted: Nov. 22, 1983; Reason delisted: Species more abundant or widespread: Subsequent studies completed after the time of listing revealed a number of new populations and a more extensive distribution of the species throughout Florida and Alabama. Species name: Umpqua River cutthroat trout; Description: A fish found in the Umpqua River basin in coastal Oregon; Date listed: Sept. 13, 1996; Date delisted: Apr. 26, 2000; Reason delisted: Species more abundant or widespread: An expanded review subsequent to listing showed that this population is part of another larger population of trout that did not warrant listing. Species name: Lloyd's hedgehog cactus; Description: A cactus primarily occurring in Texas and New Mexico; Date listed: Oct. 26, 1979; Date delisted: June 24, 1999; Reason delisted: Species more abundant or widespread: Subsequent studies completed after the time of listing showed evidence indicating that the cactus is not a distinct species but rather is a hybrid. Species name: Cuneate bidens; Description: A flowering Hawaiian plant; Date listed: Feb. 17, 1984; Date delisted: Feb. 6, 1996; Reason delisted: Species more abundant or widespread: Subsequent studies after the time of listing culminated in a taxonomic revision of the genus. The plant was determined to be no more than an outlying population of another common species, which is not significantly threatened. Species name: Spineless hedgehog cactus; Description: A cactus known to occur in southeastern Utah and southwestern Colorado; Date listed: Nov. 7, 1979; Date delisted: Sept. 22, 1993; Reason delisted: Species more abundant or widespread: Subsequent to listing, several evaluations did not recognize the cactus as a distinct species and the consensus of botanists was that the cactus was only a form of another type of cactus which was much more widespread, occurring from Utah and Colorado south into central Mexico. Species name: Purple-spined hedgehog cactus; Description: A cactus occurring in southwestern Utah; Date listed: Oct. 11, 1979; Date delisted: Nov. 27, 1989; Reason delisted: Species more abundant or widespread: Several reviews after listing discovered that the characteristics of the purple-spined hedgehog cactus were simply morphological variations within the population of a more common species found throughout the Mojave Desert in southwestern Utah. Species name: Mexican duck; Description: A duck found throughout the southwestern U.S. and Mexico; Date listed: Mar. 11, 1967; Date delisted: July 25, 1978; Reason delisted: Species more abundant or widespread: After the listing of the Mexican duck, the duck was determined to be a subspecies of the common mallard duck with a large zone of interbreeding between the two. Additional information also indicated that the loss of habitat throughout its range was no longer a threat that would qualify the species for listing. Source: GAO analysis of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service data. [End of table] Concerns Remain Over the Adequacy of Scientific Information Used in Making Critical Habitat Decisions: While external reviews indicate that the Service bases most critical habitat decisions on the best available science, concerns remain over the adequacy of the information available to support the decisions. Experts and others we spoke to explained that the amount of scientific information available on a species' habitat needs often may be limited, affecting the Service's ability to adequately define the habitat area required. Experts that peer reviewed proposed critical habitat designations generally supported the Service's decisions, though many provided additional clarifications or suggestions. While the courts have overturned few critical habitat decisions on the basis of inadequate science, scientific disagreements over these decisions continue. Experts and Others Express Concerns About Critical Habitat Decisions: Experts and others knowledgeable about the Endangered Species Act have expressed concerns about the Service's ability to designate critical habitat for some listed species given the amount of information available on the species' habitat needs. Unlike listing decisions, which are more straightforward--requiring the Service to answer only a "yes or no" question as to whether a species warrants listing--critical habitat decisions often require more detailed knowledge about a species' life history and habitat needs and call for the Service to factor in the species' special management needs in addition to the economic impacts of the designation. Service officials, experts, and others we spoke to agreed that the amount of scientific information available is limited and often affects the Service's ability to adequately define the habitat essential to the species' conservation. While some interested parties stated that the Service designated areas too broadly and included lands unsuitable for several species, others said that the Service did not designate enough habitat for some listed species. According to Service officials, the resource and time constraints under which the Service's scientists work often preclude them from collecting new information and, as a result, the information available may limit their ability to produce adequate critical habitat designations for some species. We found that most scientific disagreements surrounding recent critical habitat designations concerned whether the area chosen as critical habitat is sufficiently defined or whether the overall information used to support the designation is adequate. (See app. IV for information on the nature of scientific controversy surrounding the Service's decisions to designate critical habitat for listed species.) In order to increase the amount of information available on which to base critical habitat designations, the Service and others, including the National Research Council, have recommended delaying designations until recovery plans are developed.[Footnote 33] Peer Reviewers Generally Support the Service's Critical Habitat Designations, but Raise Concerns about the Areas Selected: The Service received 69 peer-review responses for 27 of the 37 critical habitat decisions finalized during fiscal years 1999 through 2002; it received no responses for 10 decisions (see app. III). Reviewers providing comments in 17 of these decisions unanimously agreed with the Service's scientific conclusions or otherwise indicated support for the critical habitat designation. In six decisions, while not stating explicit agreement with the Service's use of science, the reviewer did not identify any major inadequacies or reasons for substantially modifying the proposed habitat. In another decision, the Service reported that five peer reviewers supported the decision and one was "neutral." One or more peer reviewers disagreed with the Service's proposed critical habitat designations for the remaining three decisions: * Zapata bladderpod. The one reviewer responding to the proposed critical habitat designation of the Zapata bladderpod, a flowering plant that grows in Texas, stated that the areas selected on state and private lands were too small to support viable populations or the area was not always suitable habitat for the species. The reviewer also said it was premature to select those sites given the lack of information about the species. * Cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl. The one reviewer responding to the proposed critical habitat designation for the cactus ferruginous pygmy- owl, a small bird found in the southwestern United States, disagreed with the designation on the grounds that there were too many unknowns about the species' habitat requirements to support a determination about its critical habitat. * Newcomb's snail. Two of the six reviewers responding to the Service's proposed critical habitat determination for the Newcomb's snail (found only on the island of Kauai, Hawaii) disagreed with the proposed rule- -the other four supported it. One of the reviewers who disagreed stated that there was inadequate information to make a determination because habitat requirements for the snail were limited to generalized observations in the field and thus were speculative. The reviewer said the designation did not identify the habitat features essential to the conservation of the species and was premature until additional biological information was obtained. Similarly, the other reviewer objecting to the determination did so largely because of his understanding that the process was based on few published scientific studies, and much was still unknown about the species' habitat requirements. Even though peer reviewers may have concurred with the Service's critical habitat designation, many provided clarifications or suggested modifications. We analyzed the peer reviewers' responses for 16 of the 27 critical habitat decisions the Service made. There were 35 peer- review responses to these 16 decisions. Nearly all of the reviewers provided specific clarifications on information contained in the rule or suggestions for altering the habitat area selected. For instance, in many of the responses, the reviewer agreed with the proposal in general, but stated that additional lands should be included in the critical habitat designation and cited scientific reasons for increasing habitat areas. In one decision, a reviewer generally supporting the proposed critical habitat of the arroyo toad (an endangered toad found in coastal and desert drainages in California) identified specific areas where he believed the toad ranged more widely and would therefore warrant additional critical habitat. Another reviewer, generally supporting the proposed critical habitat for the Great Lakes population of the piping plover (a small shorebird that occurs across North America), identified sites she believed should be added to the designation and areas she believed to be unsuitable for the species and therefore should be excluded from the designation. Courts Have Overturned Few Critical Habitat Decisions on the Basis of Inadequate Science: As with listing decisions, and due in part to the deference the courts grant to the Service, most litigation has not directly challenged the Service's use of science in making critical habitat determinations. Based on a review of federal court cases decided during fiscal years 1999 through 2002, we identified 11 cases in which a court issued an opinion regarding the Service's critical habitat decisions. Most of these 11 cases dealt with nonscience issues, such as the Service's failure to designate critical habitat for a listed species. However, the courts overturned critical habitat decisions on the basis of issues related to the use of scientific data in the following two cases:[Footnote 34] * Rio Grande silvery minnow. In 2000, a federal court invalidated the critical habitat of the Rio Grande silvery minnow based in part on scientific grounds.[Footnote 35] Multiple groups, including the state of New Mexico, challenged the designation of critical habitat for the silvery minnow, a fish found exclusively in the Rio Grande River in the Southwest. The critical habitat designation for this fish consisted of a 163-mile stretch of the main stem of the Rio Grande River. The court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs because it found that the Service's final rule had failed to (1) define with sufficient specificity what biological and physical features were essential to the species' survival and recovery and (2) indicate where in each reach of the river such features existed. For example, the court said that the Service's statement in the rule regarding the minnow's need for "sufficient flowing water" provided vague generalities that stated little more than what is required for any fish species. As a result of this court ruling, the Service is in the process of redesignating critical habitat for this species. * Cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl. In 2001, a court struck down the critical habitat designation for the cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl because, among other reasons, the designation was not supported by the best available scientific data.[Footnote 36] The final critical habitat for the pygmy-owl, a small bird found in the southwestern United States, consisted of over 700,000 acres of riparian and upland habitat in Arizona. The court noted that the determination of critical habitat is to be made on the basis of the "best scientific data available" and that this involves identifying geographic areas "essential to the conservation of the species." The court then pointed out that systematic owl surveys had not yet been completed over the entire potential habitat in Arizona, and that the Service determined critical habitat by designating areas where the pygmy-owls had been sighted, areas that it thought would be consistent with the species' known habitat, and all the land in between. The court also pointed out that, in addition to the areas actually occupied by the pygmy-owls, the Service had included areas where it thought they could live. The court appeared to conclude that, in order to include areas that were not presently occupied, the Service should have determined that such areas were in fact essential to the conservation of the species. Although the Service had already agreed to reconsider the economic analysis used in the critical habitat designation, the court concluded that a "broader reconsideration" of the critical habitat designation was necessary. The Service is in the process of redesignating critical habitat for the pygmy-owl. The Service Has Failed to Address Known Problems with the Critical Habitat Program: The Service's critical habitat program currently faces a serious crisis that extends well beyond the use of science in making decisions. Litigation now dominates the program, leading the Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks in the Department of the Interior to recently declare that the system for designating critical habitat is "broken" because it provides little conservation benefit while consuming significant resources. A key court case in 1997 invalidated the Service's position on when critical habitat should be designated. The Endangered Species Act generally requires the Service to designate critical habitat for listed species unless the Service determines it is "not prudent,"[Footnote 37] and the Service's regulations spell out that it is not prudent to designate critical habitat if doing so would not be "beneficial to the species."[Footnote 38] As a result, prior to 1997, the Service had designated critical habitat for only 113 of the 1,023 domestic species that it had listed. The Service reasoned that designating critical habitat did not benefit the species because the benefits that critical habitat provided duplicated those benefits provided by listing the species.[Footnote 39] The 1997 court case invalidated the Service's reasoning, ruling that the Service's determination that it was not prudent to designate critical habitat for the coastal California gnatcatcher, a songbird unique to coastal southern California, was not justified.[Footnote 40] One of the reasons that the Service concluded that it was not prudent to designate critical habitat was because it believed that such a designation would not appreciably benefit the species because most populations of gnatcatchers were found on private lands to which the act's critical habitat protections would not apply. The court found that this reasoning improperly expanded what Congress had intended to be a narrow exception to designating critical habitat. The court concluded that the Service had disregarded "the clear congressional intent that the imprudence exception be a rare exception." Since then, court orders and settlement agreements have compelled the Service to designate critical habitat for species for which it had previously determined that it was not prudent to do so. Subsequently, a 2001 court case led the Service to reconsider some of its critical habitat designations.[Footnote 41] The case involved the requirement of the act that the Service consider the economic impact of designating a particular area as critical habitat. According to the act, the Service may exclude areas from critical habitat if it determines that the benefits of excluding the area outweigh the benefits of including the area as critical habitat unless excluding it would result in the extinction of the species. For example, in 1997, the Service designated critical habitat for the southwestern willow flycatcher, a small bird that nests in riparian areas in the southwestern United States. Because the Service believed that designating critical habitat would not result in additional restrictions on activities beyond those resulting from listing the species, it reasoned that there would be no significant economic impact associated with designating critical habitat for the flycatcher.[Footnote 42] However, the court disagreed. It found that since the act clearly barred the Service from considering economic impacts in listing decisions, but required they be considered in critical habitat decisions, the Service was not free to ignore the economic impacts of listing a species when designating critical habitat for that species. The court held that the Service had to consider all of the economic impacts of a critical habitat determination, regardless of whether those impacts were also attributable to listing or other causes. Since this decision was issued, court orders and settlement agreements have prompted the Service to re-issue some critical habitat decisions to comply with this standard. Since these two court rulings, the Service's critical habitat program has become dominated by litigation. Each critical habitat designation made since 1997 has resulted from a court order or a settlement agreement, and the Service expects that it will have to dedicate significant resources through fiscal year 2008 to comply with existing court orders and settlement agreements. The department believes that this flood of litigation over critical habitat designation is preventing the Service from taking what it deems to be higher priority activities, such as addressing the approximately 250 "candidate" species waiting to go through the listing process (listing and critical habitat activities are funded under the same line item in the department's budget). Service officials noted that there are other court decisions that may cause additional problems for the program in the future. The Service has been aware of problems with its critical habitat program for a number of years. The Service noted significant problems with its critical habitat program in 1997,[Footnote 43] and in 1999 it issued a Federal Register notice announcing that its system for designating critical habitat was not working and soliciting comments on its intention to develop policy or guidance and/or to revise regulations or seek legislative corrections to clarify the role of critical habitat in conserving endangered species.[Footnote 44] In particular, the Service stated its intention to consider when critical habitat designation would provide additional protection beyond that provided by listing. The Service also announced its intention to streamline the process for designating critical habitat to be more cost-effective and in line with the amount of conservation benefit provided to the species. In particular, the Service declared that it needs to develop a much less labor-intensive process for describing the areas proposed for designation as critical habitat. The Service also stated that it can streamline and make more cost-effective the process to conduct the economic analyses required to designate critical habitat and that it can more efficiently conduct the analyses required under the National Environmental Policy Act. The Service also noted that critical habitat litigation and related court orders were consuming much of the resources devoted to listing and critical habitat, and delaying other activities that it considered higher priority, such as addressing petitions submitted by citizens, working with landowners on conservation projects, and completing final actions to list species. However, no additional guidance or revisions were issued, and the Service continues to follow the same unworkable system. The Department of the Interior recently echoed concerns with the Service's critical habitat program and the limited conservation benefit it provides to species. In April 2003, the Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks testified before Congress on the critical habitat program, stating that it is "broken" and in "chaos." He noted that litigation support is consuming valuable resources and that complying with court orders and settlement agreements has sharply reduced the Service's ability to prioritize its listing and critical habitat actions. Service scientists working in field offices expressed similar concerns to us about the critical habitat program, raising questions about the purpose of critical habitat and the designation process. An attorney in the Solicitor's office told us that guidance would improve the Service's critical habitat decisions and make the decisions more defensible in court in the future. Despite the long-standing concerns over the role and implementation of the critical habitat program, the Service has done little to resolve them. In a report issued in June 2002, we recognized the impact that litigation was having on the critical habitat program and recommended that the Service expedite its efforts to develop guidance on designating critical habitat for listed species to help reduce the influence of future litigation.[Footnote 45] Better guidance would help reduce the number of legal challenges to the Service's critical habitat designations and allow the Service to better withstand legal challenges when they arise. While the Service agreed with our recommendation, it responded that work on critical habitat guidance had been delayed pending Service efforts to complete higher priority tasks, including court orders to complete listing and critical habitat decisions and did not commit to a schedule for issuing the guidance. An official with Interior's Solicitor's office told us that one factor limiting the agency's ability to complete these tasks is the Service's inability to devote significant listing and critical habitat resources to policy initiatives without risking contempt of court because such action would force the agency to divert resources away from activities required to comply with court orders. Conclusion: The Service's critical habitat program faces a serious crisis because of extensive litigation that is consuming significant program resources. The Service has recognized this crisis for many years but has done little to address it. Accordingly, in June 2002, we recommended that the Service expedite its efforts to develop guidance on designating critical habitat to reduce the influence of future litigation. While the Service agreed with our recommendation, it has done little to develop this guidance. Service officials complain that they are locked in a vicious cycle, precluded from developing the guidance for fear of being held in contempt of court for diverting resources away from activities already required by existing court orders. While the Service clearly faces a dilemma, it is imperative that it clarify the role of critical habitat and develop guidance for how and when it should be designated, and seek regulatory and/or legislative changes that may be necessary to provide threatened and endangered species with the greatest conservation benefit in the most cost-effective manner. Recommendation for Executive Action: Because the Service's critical habitat program faces serious challenges, we recommend that the Secretary of the Interior require the Service to provide clear strategic direction for the critical habitat program, within a specified time frame, by clarifying the role of critical habitat and how and when it should be designated, and recommending policy/guidance, regulatory, and/or legislative changes necessary to provide the greatest conservation benefit to threatened and endangered species in the most cost-effective manner. Agency Comments: We provided the Department of the Interior with a draft of this report. The department did not provide comments on the draft. : As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce the contents of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days from the report date. At that time, we will send copies of this report to the Secretary of the Interior and other interested parties. We also will make copies available to others upon request. In addition, the report will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at http:// www.gao.gov. If you or your staffs have any questions, please call me at (202) 512- 3841. Key contributors to this report are listed in appendix V. Signed by: Barry T. Hill Director, Natural Resources and Environment: [End of section] Appendixes: Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: This report assesses the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's consideration and use of science in its decisions to list species as threatened or endangered and to designate critical habitat.[Footnote 46] Specifically, we were asked to review the extent to which (1) the Service's policies and practices ensure that listing and critical habitat decisions are based on the best available science and (2) outside reviewers have supported the scientific data and conclusions that the Service uses to make listing and critical habitat decisions. In no instance did we attempt to evaluate scientific data and render an opinion. For this evaluation, we define "science" as the collection and interpretation of biological information, such as the identification of a species and its habitat needs. This definition does not include the legal policies and definitions found in the law or used to implement or interpret the Endangered Species Act. However, we acknowledge that there is not always a clear distinction between the interpretation of biological information and the policies and definitions used to interpret the act. In meeting our first objective, we examined the Service's decision- making process to determine the extent to which it would likely lead to decisions based on the best available science. We reviewed the Service's policies and procedures related to how it makes these decisions and discussed the process and procedures with key officials at the Service's headquarters and with staff in the Service's regional and field offices to determine their knowledge of the process and how they implemented it. We also spoke with peer-review experts and examined the literature on the processes that organizations use to peer review their decisions and products to assess the reasonableness of the Service's policy to peer review proposed listing and critical habitat decisions. In meeting both objectives, we obtained from the Service a list of the decisions to list species and designate critical habitat that the Service finalized during fiscal years 1999 through 2002. To verify the completeness of the provided list of decisions, we compared it with a second independent database maintained by the Service. We identified one decision that was not on the original list provided to us by the Service. We included that decision in our analysis. Based on this information, we identified 101 final decisions to list or designate critical habitat that were published in the Federal Register during fiscal years 1999 through 2002. We examined the Federal Register notices for the 101 decisions to determine (1) the extent to which the Service complied with its peer- review policy to request at least three peer reviewers to review each decision, (2) the number that reviewed each decision, and (3) whether or not the reviewer(s) supported the decision. In 61 of the 101 decisions, we extracted this information from the Federal Register. For the remaining 40 decisions, we contacted the 18 field offices responsible for the decisions and requested that they provide the peer- review documentation, including copies of the peer reviewers' responses. The Service provided us with the missing information in all but seven instances; in five of those instances partial information was available. To assess the accuracy of the information reported in the Federal Register notices, we requested that the Service provide documentation for the peer-review information, including peer reviewers' responses, for 8 of the 61 decisions for which complete information was available in the Federal Register notice. We selected these 8 decisions in the following way. In order to minimize the burden on the Service's field staff, we limited our universe to the decisions that were the responsibility of the18 field offices that we already intended to contact. These offices were responsible for 48 of the 61 decisions for which there was complete information in the Federal Register notice. We then randomly chose 1 decision from each of the three offices with the most decisions. Collectively these offices were responsible for 25 of the 48 decisions. We also randomly chose 5 of the remaining 23 decisions. We compared the documentation provided to us with the information in the corresponding Federal Register notices. We found no discrepancies. However, we did find minor discrepancies between other Federal Register notices and the documentation the Service provided to us. We reconciled these discrepancies. Additionally, based on a limited review, we found the Service's procedures reasonable for ensuring that its database contains accurate information. For example, the Service regularly samples data recently added to the database for accuracy. We did not determine the extent to which any of the Service's final decisions reflected the comments and opinions of the peer reviewers. In addition to determining whether peer reviewers supported the decision they reviewed, we performed a content analysis on the peer- review responses for 16 critical habitat decisions to more fully characterize the opinions of the peer reviewers. We chose to perform a content analysis on the responses to critical habitat decisions because these decisions are open-ended, requiring the Service to determine how much critical habitat to designate and where that habitat should be located. There were 35 peer-review responses for these 16 decisions. To determine how well the Service's listing and critical habitat decisions are withstanding legal challenges to the science supporting those decisions, we used common legal research methods to identify federal court cases related to the Service's listing and critical habitat decisions. We identified and reviewed 25 cases that were decided during fiscal years 1999 through 2002 that involved a challenge to a Service listing decision and/or critical habitat decision, and in which the court rendered a decision on the listing or critical habitat issue. To determine the extent to which the Service has delisted species because new scientific information surfaced indicating that listing was not originally warranted, we used information from the Service's publicly accessible database. We included in our analysis all decisions to delist species from the inception of the act through March 2003. We compared this information with information published in the Federal Register. We found no discrepancies. Finally, to get a fuller understanding of the degree of scientific controversy regarding listing and critical habitat decisions, we solicited the opinions of experts and others and reviewed published studies. To illustrate the nature of scientific controversy regarding listing and critical habitat decisions, we developed a list of decisions for which there was some degree of scientific controversy. We developed this list by asking experts in the private, academic, government, and nonprofit sectors spanning the political spectrum to identify recent decisions that were particularly controversial due to scientific disagreements and briefly explain the nature of the controversy. We limited our analysis to decisions finalized during fiscal years 1993 through 2002. In addition, we asked each expert for the names of other experts who could help us develop our list. We stopped contacting experts when we began to get repetitive responses. We then identified common issues related to the controversies to characterize the types of disagreements involved with each of the decisions. We based this on the information provided by the experts and information published in the Federal Register. Finally, we presented the list of decisions and related information to officials at the Service and at the National Academy of Sciences for their opinions on the list of decisions and how we characterized them. The officials generally agreed with the information we presented. Additionally, in the course of our work, it became apparent that litigation was dominating the Service's critical habitat program, and we discuss these circumstances in our report. Specifically, we describe how several key court cases are affecting the program. We performed our work from September 2002 through June 2003 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. [End of section] Appendix II: Overview of The Endangered Species Act: The Endangered Species Act was passed by Congress to provide a means to conserve the ecosystems upon which endangered and threatened species depend and to conserve and recover imperiled species. The act was passed in 1973 and replaced earlier laws, which provided for a list of endangered species but gave them little meaningful protection. While significant amendments were enacted in 1978, 1982, and 1988, the overall framework of the act has remained essentially unchanged. The Department of the Interior delegated its responsibility for the act to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), which established an endangered species program to implement the requirements of the act. The Service is responsible for all land-dwelling species, freshwater species, some marine mammals, and migratory birds. The Department of Commerce, which has delegated its responsibility to the National Marine Fisheries Service, is responsible for implementing the act for marine species including anadromous (both freshwater and ocean dwelling) fish. The act provides numerous provisions to protect and recover species at risk of extinction. However, before a plant or animal species is eligible to benefit from most of these provisions, it must first be added to the Federal List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants. Once on the list, key provisions of the act, including critical habitat, recovery plans, consultations with federal agencies, and habitat conservation plans, are designed to assist in recovering the species so that it can then be removed from the list. Listing Species as Endangered or Threatened: Under the act, species may be listed as either endangered or threatened. An endangered species is any species of animal or plant that is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range. A threatened species is any species of animal or plant that is likely to become endangered within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range. All species of plants and animals (except pest insects) are eligible for listing as endangered or threatened. As of June 2003, there were a total of 1,821 listed species; 1,504 species on the endangered species list, 987 of which occur in the United States; and 317 threatened species, 276 of which occur in the United States.[Footnote 47] The decision to list a species must be based solely on the best available scientific and commercial data. Using these data, the Service must determine whether a species should be listed by analyzing its status based on the following factors: (1) current or threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of a species habitat or range; (2) over utilization of the species for commercial, recreational, scientific, or educational purposes; (3) disease or predation; (4) inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; and (5) other natural or manmade factors affecting the species' continued existence. The Service follows a rigorous process to determine whether to list a species. A final decision to list a species is published in the Federal Register. The Service may issue emergency regulations to list a species without complying with the normal regulatory process if it finds that an emergency poses a significant risk to the well-being of any species. Emergency regulations take effect immediately upon publication in the Federal Register and are effective for 240 days. The Service also maintains a list of candidate species. Candidate species are species for which substantial information is available to support a listing proposal, but have not yet been proposed for listing. The Service maintains this list for a variety of reasons, including (1) to provide advance knowledge of potential listings that could affect decisions of environmental planners and developers, (2) to solicit input from interested parties to identify those candidate species that may not require protection under the act or additional species that may require the act's protections, and (3) to solicit information needed to prioritize the order in which species will be proposed for listing. The Service is required to publish a notice of review annually in the Federal Register to solicit new information on the status of candidate species. The Service works with parties, such as states and private partners, to carry out conservation actions--often called Candidate Conservation Agreements--for candidate species to prevent their further decline and possibly eliminate the need to list them as endangered or threatened. As of June 2003, there were 251 candidate species, many of which have held that status for more than a decade. Critical Habitat: The Service is generally required to designate critical habitat at the time a species is listed as endangered or threatened. Critical habitat is the specific geographic area essential for the conservation of a threatened or endangered species and that may require special management considerations and protection. Critical habitat contains physical and biological habitat features such as: (1) space for individual and population growth and for normal behavior; (2) cover or shelter, food, water, air, light, minerals, or other nutritional or physiological requirements; (3) sites for breeding and rearing offspring; and (4) habitats that are protected from disturbances or are representative of the historic geographical and ecological distributions of a species. Critical habitat may also include areas not occupied by the species at the time of listing but that are essential to the conservation and recovery of the species. Unlike the decision to list a species as endangered or threatened, a final designation of critical habitat is to be made on the basis of not only the best scientific data available but also taking into consideration the economic and other effects of making the decision. If the benefits of excluding an area outweigh the benefits of including it, the Service may exclude an area from critical habitat, unless the exclusion would result in the extinction of the species. The Service may take up to an additional year after listing a species to designate critical habitat if it finds that critical habitat is "not determinable." Critical habitat is not determinable when information sufficient to perform the required analyses of the impacts of the designation of critical habitat is lacking or the biological needs of the species are not sufficiently known to permit identification of an area as critical habitat. The Service does not designate critical habitat if it determines that doing so would be "not prudent." It would not be prudent to designate critical habitat if (1) identifying the habitat is expected to increase the threat to the species or (2) designating an area as critical habitat is not expected to benefit the species. Recovery Plans: Once a species is listed, the act requires the Service to develop a recovery plan for the species. Recovery plans identify, justify, and schedule the research and management actions necessary to reverse the decline of a species and ensure its long-term survival. Recovery plans must be developed for all listed species, unless such a plan would not benefit the species. Although the act does not specify time frames for developing or implementing the recovery plan or for recovering the species, the Service has as a goal of developing recovery plans within 1 year and having approved plans within 2˝ years of a species' listing. The Service solicits comments from state and federal agencies, experts and the public on draft recovery plans during a formal public comment period announced in the Federal Register. The Service periodically reviews approved recovery plans to determine if updates or revisions are needed. As of June 2003, 1000 species had approved recovery plans. Consultations with Federal Agencies: Federal agencies are required to consult with the Service if their actions may affect listed species. The goal of the consultation process is to identify and resolve conflicts between the protection and enhancement of listed species and proposed federal actions. The act requires that all federal agencies consult with the Service to ensure that any activities agencies permit, fund, or conduct are not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of a listed species or adversely modify its critical habitat. Federal agencies may informally consult with the Service to determine whether their actions may affect listed species and must proceed to formal consultations once they determine that their actions may adversely affect a listed species or its habitat. The act requires a formal consultation to be completed in 90 days, unless the Service and the federal agency mutually agree to an extension, with the applicant's consent. The Service is to issue a "biological opinion" within 45 days of the conclusion of formal consultation that reviews the potential effects of the proposed action on listed species and/or critical habitat. The Service must base the biological opinion on the best available biological information. If the Service finds that the action would appreciably reduce the likelihood of the species' survival and recovery, it issues a jeopardy biological opinion. Jeopardy opinions include reasonable and prudent alternatives that define modifications to the agency's proposed action that enable it to continue and still be consistent with the act's requirements for protecting species. Following the issuance of the biological opinion, the federal agency determines whether it will comply with the opinion or seek an exemption from the act's requirements. Proposed federal agency actions that have been determined to cause jeopardy to any listed species may receive an exemption from the act by the Federal Endangered Species Committee (also referred to as the "God Squad"). The Endangered Species Committee is comprised of seven members: the Secretary of Agriculture, the Secretary of the Army, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, the Secretary of the Interior, the Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and one individual from the affected state. An exemption is granted if at least five members of the Endangered Species Committee determine that, among other things, the action is of regional or national significance, that the benefits of the action clearly outweigh the benefits of conserving the species, and that there are no reasonable and prudent alternatives to the action. The Endangered Species Committee has been convened only three times since its creation in 1978--the Tellico Dam for the snail darter fish in Tennessee, the Grayrocks Dam in Wyoming for the whooping crane, and Bureau of Land Management (BLM) timber sales for the spotted owl in Oregon. Only two exemptions were granted. One was in regard to the Grayrocks dam and the other was to approve 13 timber sales sought by BLM (which was withdrawn before the completion of appeals). The Tellico dam application was denied but was later allowed by Congress to proceed.[Footnote 48] In addition, three other applications were received but were subsequently dismissed or withdrawn before deliberations took place. Habitat Conservation Plans: The act generally prohibits any person from "taking" an animal species listed as endangered.[Footnote 49] "Taking" or "take" means to harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture or collect a listed species, and under Service guidelines, includes the destruction of the species' habitat. However, in 1982, Congress amended the act to include a process whereby the Service may issue permits that allow private individuals to incidentally take listed species. Incidental take is the take of any federally listed species that is incidental to, but not the purpose of, otherwise lawful activities. Permit applicants are required to submit a habitat conservation plan, which includes measures the applicant will take to minimize and mitigate the impacts that may result from the taking. The Service is required to publish a notice in the Federal Register soliciting comments from interested parties on each application for a permit and its accompanying habitat conservation plan. As of April 2003, 416 habitat conservation plans have been approved. The act prohibits the Service from issuing a permit if doing so would appreciably reduce the likelihood of the survival and recovery of the species in the wild. The incidental taking of a listed species resulting from federal agency actions may also be allowed under the act and would be addressed through the consultation process. [End of section] Appendix III: Peer Reviewers' Responses to Listing and Critical Habitat Decisions for Fiscal Years 1999 through 2002: Federal Register title and number: Listing decisions. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered or Threatened Status for Five Desert Milk-vetch Taxa From California (63 FR 53596); Date: Listing decisions: Oct. 6, 1998; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered or Threatened Status for Four Southwestern California Plants from Vernal Wetlands and Clay Soils (63 FR 54975); Date: Listing decisions: Oct. 13, 1998; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 1; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determinations of Endangered or Threatened Status for Four Plants (63 FR 54938); Date: Listing decisions: Oct. 13, 1998; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Endangered or Threatened Status for Three Plants from the Chaparral and Scrub of Southwestern California (63 FR 54956); Date: Listing decisions: Oct. 13, 1998; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 0; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Endangered Status for Three Aquatic Snails, and Threatened Status for Three Aquatic Snails in the Mobile River Basin of Alabama (63 FR 57610); Date: Listing decisions: Oct. 28, 1998; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 1; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Threatened Status for Virginia Sneezweed (Helenium virginicum) a Plant From the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia (63 FR 59239); Date: Listing decisions: Nov. 3, 1998; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule to List the Arkansas River Basin Population of the Arkansas River Shiner (Notropis girardi) as Threatened (63 FR 64772); Date: Listing decisions: Nov. 23, 1998; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 20; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 1; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule To List the Topeka Shiner as Endangered (63 FR 69008); Date: Listing decisions: Dec. 15, 1998; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 1; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered Status for the St. Andrew Beach Mouse (63 FR 70053); Date: Listing decisions: Dec. 18, 1998; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 4; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Threatened Status for the Sacramento Splittail (64 FR 5963); Date: Listing decisions: Feb. 8, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 0; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered Status for Catesbaea Melanocarpa (64 FR 13116); Date: Listing decisions: Mar 17, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 0; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule To List the Flatwoods Salamander as a Threatened Species (64 FR 15691); Date: Listing decisions: Apr. 1, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 3; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Threatened Status for the Plant Thelypodium howellii ssp. spectabilis (Howell's spectacular thelypody) (64 FR 28393); Date: Listing decisions: May 26, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered Status for the Plant Eriogonum apricum (inclusive of vars. apricum and prostratum) (Ione Buckwheat) and Threatened Status for the Plant Arctostaphylos myrtifolia (64 FR 28403); Date: Listing decisions: May 26, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 1; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Threatened Status for Lake Erie Water Snakes (Nerodia sipedon insularum) on the Offshore Islands of Western Lake Erie (64 FR 47126); Date: Listing decisions: Aug. 30, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: [A]; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Endangered Status for 10 Plant Taxa From Maui Nui, HI (64 FR 48307); Date: Listing decisions: Sep. 3, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 6; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 0; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule to List the Devils River Minnow as Threatened (64 FR 56596); Date: Listing decisions: Oct. 20, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 5; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 4; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule to List Astragalus desereticus (Desert milk-vetch) as Threatened (64 FR 56590); Date: Listing decisions: Oct. 20, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 3; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Threatened Status for the Plant Helianthus paradoxicus (Pecos Sunflower) (64 FR 56582); Date: Listing decisions: Oct. 20, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Threatened Status for Bull Trout in the Coterminous United States (64 FR 58910); Date: Listing decisions: Nov. 1, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 6; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 1; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered Status for the Plant Lesquerella thamnophila (Zapata Bladderpod) (64 FR 63745); Date: Listing decisions: Nov. 22, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 29; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 3; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Endangered Status for the Plant Fritillaria gentneri (Gentner's fritillary) (64 FR 69195); Date: Listing decisions: Dec. 10, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: [B]; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 4; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered Status for Sidalcea oregana var. calva (Wenatchee Mountains Checker-Mallow) (64 FR 71680); Date: Listing decisions: Dec. 22, 1999; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 3; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 3[C]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule To List the Sierra Nevada Distinct Population Segment of the California Bighorn Sheep as Endangered (65 FR 20); Date: Listing decisions: Jan. 3, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 3; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule To List Two Cave Animals From Kauai, Hawaii, as Endangered (65 FR 2348); Date: Listing decisions: Jan. 14, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 1; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Endangered Status for Erigeron decumbens var. decumbens (Willamette Daisy) and Fender's Blue Butterfly (Icaricia icarioides fenderi) and Threatened Status for Lupinus sulphureus ssp. Kincaidii (65 FR 3875); Date: Listing decisions: Jan. 25, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: [B]; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 6; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 6; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Endangered Status for the Plant Plagiobothrys hirtus (Rough Popcornflower) (65 FR 3866); Date: Listing decisions: Jan. 25, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: [B]; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered Status for Two Larkspurs From Coastal Northern California (65 FR 4156); Date: Listing decisions: Jan. 26, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 3; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Threatened Status for Newcomb's Snail From the Hawaiian Islands (65 FR 4162); Date: Listing decisions: Jan. 26, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 3; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered Status for Blackburn's Sphinx Moth from the Hawaiian Islands (65 FR 4770); Date: Listing decisions: Feb. 1, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 0; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered Status for the Plant Yreka Phlox from Siskiyou County, CA (65 FR 5268); Date: Listing decisions: Feb. 3, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 1; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered Status for the Plant Thlaspi californicum (Kneel and Prairie Penny-Cress) From Coastal Northern California (65 FR 6332); Date: Listing decisions: Feb. 9, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 0; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Endangered Status for Sidalcea keckii (Keck's checker-mallow) From Fresno and Tulare Counties, CA (65 FR 7757); Date: Listing decisions: Feb. 16, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule to List the Riparian Brush Rabbit and the Riparian, or San Joaquin Valley, Woodrat as Endangered (65 FR 8881); Date: Listing decisions: Feb. 23, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Endangered Status for the Armored Snail and Slender Campeloma (65 FR 10033); Date: Listing decisions: Feb. 25, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 0; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Threatened Status for Holocarpha macradenia (Santa Cruz tarplant) (65 FR 14898); Date: Listing decisions: Mar. 20, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 4; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Threatened Status for Chlorogalum purpureum (Purple Amole), a Plant From the South Coast Ranges of California (65 FR 14878); Date: Listing decisions: Mar. 20, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule for Endangered Status for Four Plants From South Central Coastal California (65 FR 14888); Date: Listing decisions: Mar. 20, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Threatened Status for the Contiguous U.S. Distinct Population Segment of the Canada Lynx (65 FR 16052); Date: Listing decisions: Mar. 24, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 6; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Determination of Threatened Status for the Northern Idaho Ground Squirrel (65 FR 17779); Date: Listing decisions: Apr. 5, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 1; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: 1[B]. Federal Register title and number: Threatened Status for the Santa Ana Sucker (65 FR 19686); Date: Listing decisions: Apr. 12, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule To List as Endangered the O'ahu 'Elepaio From the Hawaiian Islands and Determination of Whether Designation of Critical Habitat Is Prudent (65 FR 20760); Date: Listing decisions: Apr. 18, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule To List the Alabama Sturgeon as Endangered (65 FR 26438); Date: Listing decisions: May 5, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 5; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 5; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 4; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: 1; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule To List the Short-Tailed Albatross as Endangered in the United States (65 FR 46643); Date: Listing decisions: Jul. 31, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 5; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 3; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule To List the Santa Barbara County Distinct Population of the California Tiger Salamander as Endangered (65 FR 57242); Date: Listing decisions: Sep. 21, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 8; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 6; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 6; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants: Threatened Status for the Colorado Butterfly Plant (Gaura neomexicana ssp. coloradensis) From Southeastern Wyoming, Northcentral Colorado, and Extreme Western Nebraska (65 FR 62302); Date: Listing decisions: Oct. 18, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 2; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 2; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Endangered Status for a Distinct Population Segment of Anadromous Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) in the Gulf of Maine (65 FR 69459); Date: Listing decisions: Nov. 17, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 6; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 3; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: 3; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule to List Nine Bexar County, Texas Invertebrate Species as Endangered (65 FR 81419); Date: Listing decisions: Dec. 26, 2000; Peer reviewers: Asked: Listing decisions: 9; Peer reviewers: Responded: Listing decisions: 0; Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Agree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Disagree: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Neutral: Listing decisions: [Empty]; Peer reviewers' response: Unknown/ unclear: Listing decisions: [Empty]. Federal Register title and number: Final Rule for Endangered Status for Astragalus pycnostachyus var. lan osissimus (Ventura marsh