The Arizona Republic

Climate change taking toll on American pika in West

- BRADY MCCOMBS ASSOCIATED PRESS

SALT LAKE CITY - Population­s of a rabbit-like animal known as the American pika are vanishing in many mountainou­s areas of the West as climate change alters its habitat, according to findings released Thursday by the U.S. Geological Survey.

The range for the mountain-dwelling herbivore is decreasing in southern Utah, northeaste­rn California, and the Great Basin that covers most of Nevada and parts of Utah, Oregon, Idaho and California, the federal agency concluded after studying the cuddly looking critter from 2012 to 2015.

This study’s conclusion marks a more authoritat­ive statement about the role of global warming on the animal compared to research released in 2003 that found climate change was at least partly contributi­ng to the animal’s decline.

“The longer we go along, the evidence continues to suggest that climate is the single strongest factor,” said Erik Beever, a research ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey and lead author.

The pika’s habitat on mountain slopes, known as talus, is hotter and drier in the summer and more harsh in the winter with less snowpack to serve as an insulator, Beever said.

The study bolsters the case for wildlife advocacy groups that have been pushing for years to have the animal added to the endangered species list amid concerns about global warming.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service rejected a request in 2010, saying not all population­s were declining. A new request was made this April by a high school student in New York state.

A decision on that request is due out in early September, but the agency’s staff won’t take into account the new study because they are bound only to take into account informatio­n submitted with the petition, said Fish and Wildlife Service spokeswoma­n Serena Baker.

Noah Greenwald, the Center for Biological Diversity’s endangered species director, said the new research confirms that climate change is putting the animal at real risk. He said it should help with future petitions to have the animal declared endangered — something he says is necessary to ensure future generation­s are treated to seeing the critters during mountain hikes.

“It’s gotta be one of the cutest animals in North America,” Greenwald said. “Part of what makes our world interestin­g is the diversity of animals and plants that you can see when you go to different species.”

President Barack Obama mentioned the plight of the pika this summer when he spoke at Yosemite National Park about the damage climate change is inflicting on the nation’s national parks. He said the pika was being forced further upslope at Yosemite to escape the heat.

The study didn’t quantify how many total American pika still exist but honed in on several areas where the small animal has historical­ly roamed eating grass, weeds and wildflower­s.

The animal is thriving in a few places, such as the Columbia River Gorge in Oregon and Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming, but overall is suffering, Beever said.

 ?? SHANA S. WEBER/USGS, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY VIA AP ?? A new study shows population­s of the rabbit-like American pika are vanishing in many mountainou­s areas of the West as climate change alters habitat.
SHANA S. WEBER/USGS, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY VIA AP A new study shows population­s of the rabbit-like American pika are vanishing in many mountainou­s areas of the West as climate change alters habitat.

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