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Pacific Bald Eagle Recovery Plan
On February 14, 1978 the bald eagle was federally listed as endangered in all of the conterminous United States except Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Oregon, and Washington, where it was classified as threatened. No critical habitat was designated at the time of listing. This recovery plan, one of five such plans, outlines the steps needed for recovery and maintenance of bald eagle populations in the 7-state Pacific recovery area. Other recovery plans exist for bald eagle populations in the Southeast, Southwest, Northern States, and Chesapeake Bay. Delisting/reclassification of bald eagles in the Pacific recovery area are not dependent on progress of bald eagle populations covered by these other plans. It concerns populations of bald eagles in Idaho, Nevada, California, Oregon, Washington, Montana, and Wyoming. The plan is based primarily biological considerations and does not attempt to resolve socio-economic and political issues. Population and habitat goals, however, were established with the understanding that spatial and political constraints exist and will limit the extent to which populations can increase.
Pacific Bald Eagle Recovery Plan
On February 14, 1978 the bald eagle was federally listed as endangered in all of the conterminous United States except Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Oregon, and Washington, where it was classified as threatened. No critical habitat was designated at the time of listing. This recovery plan, one of five such plans, outlines the steps needed for recovery and maintenance of bald eagle populations in the 7-state Pacific recovery area. Other recovery plans exist for bald eagle populations in the Southeast, Southwest, Northern States, and Chesapeake Bay. Delisting/reclassification of bald eagles in the Pacific recovery area are not dependent on progress of bald eagle populations covered by these other plans. It concerns populations of bald eagles in Idaho, Nevada, California, Oregon, Washington, Montana, and Wyoming. The plan is based primarily biological considerations and does not attempt to resolve socio-economic and political issues. Population and habitat goals, however, were established with the understanding that spatial and political constraints exist and will limit the extent to which populations can increase.
Pacific Bald Eagle Recovery Plan
1986
174 pages
Report
No indication
English
Location of Logistics Distribution Center Based on Improved Bald Eagle Algorithm
DOAJ | 2022
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