Sunday, May 04, 2025
54.0°F

To save spotted owls, US officials plan to kill hundreds of thousands of another owl species

by MATTHEW BROWN Associated Press
| July 3, 2024 8:00 AM

To save the imperiled spotted owl from potential extinction, U.S. wildlife officials are embracing a contentious plan to deploy trained shooters into dense West Coast forests to kill almost a half-million barred owls that are crowding out their smaller cousins.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service strategy released Wednesday is meant to prop up declining spotted owl populations in Oregon, Washington state and California. The Associated Press obtained details in advance.

Documents released by the agency show a maximum of about 450,000 barred owls would be shot over three decades after the birds from the eastern U.S. encroached into the West Coast territory of two owls: northern spotted owls and California spotted owls. The smaller spotted owls have been unable to compete with the invaders, which have larger broods and need less room to survive than spotted owls.

Support Local News

You have read all of your free articles this month. Select a plan below to start your subscription today.

Already a subscriber? Login

Daily Inter Lake - everything
Print delivery, e-edition and unlimited website access
  • $26.24 per month
Buy
Daily Inter Lake - unlimited website access

  • $9.95 per month
Buy
CLICK HERE FOR E-EDITION OPTION, $16.10 PER MONTH