Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Reporting on science, technology and innovation in Arizona and the Southwest through a collaboration from Arizona NPR member stations. This project is funded in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.Additional stories from the Arizona Science Desk are posted at our collaborating station, KJZZ: http://kjzz.org/science

Sonoran Desert Tortoise Will Not Be Added To Endangered Species List

George Andrejko - Arizona Game and Fish Department

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced Oct. 5 that the Sonoran desert tortoise will not be added to the Endangered Species list.

In the United States, the iconic Sonoran desert tortoise is only found in Arizona.

The tortoise became a candidate for the endangered species list in 2010, after environmental advocacy groups petitioned the federal government citing drastic population declines in some areas.

To make the final decision about listing the species, the government agency used a new model to project population changes due to threats like habitat loss, climate change and illegal collection of the tortoise, said Steve Spangle, a field supervisor with the Fish and Wildlife Service.

“We had a bunch of outputs from this model that show there’s virtually zero chance of extinction of this species over the next 50 or 60 years,” Spangle said.

The conclusion was also based, in part, on state and federal organizations managing 73 percent of the habitat for the tortoise. And population counts indicate there are more than 400,000 Sonoran desert tortoises in the wild in the U.S. and Mexico, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service.

Cecilia Vigil, a professor of biology at Arizona Western College, said although the Sonoran desert tortoise will not be listed as endangered, she believes conservation efforts for the species are needed.

“We still have to continue with our efforts to protect them, because we could be right back where we were in recent years,” Vigil said.

The state of Arizona still classifies the Sonoran desert tortoise a “Species of Greatest Conservation Need,” and collection of these wild tortoises in the United States remains illegal.