The federal agency said the , which promotes 鈥渂iological integrity, diversity and environmental health,鈥 is needed to deal with the effects of climate change in the country鈥檚 network of wildlife refuges. Those are public lands created to protect native animals and plants.
Klamath Basin farmer Marc Staunton spoke against the proposal this week at a U.S. House Committee on Natural Resources hearing. Staunton runs a farm that uses land on the Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge, part of the Fish and Wildlife Services鈥 program. It utilizes flooded wetlands to grow crops while supporting habitat for migratory birds. Supporters of his farming practice see it as an innovative solution as farmers and wildlife refuges compete for water in the drought-stricken Klamath Basin. Staunton said the new rule threatens that project.
鈥淏y coming from a place of 鈥楴o, unless,鈥 the rule impedes the ingenuity of creative minds and the experience of agriculture as a purpose within the ecosystem,鈥 said Staunton at the hearing.
At the meeting, Steve Guertin, deputy director for program management and policy at the Fish and Wildlife Service, said that while the proposal sets a default position for things like farming, it doesn鈥檛 ban those activities.
鈥淩ather, it provides refuge managers with the flexibility to use these practices when necessary to meet statutory requirements, fulfill refuge purposes and ensure ecological integrity,鈥 said Guertin.
The rule, which has received over 50,000 public comments, also prohibits the control of native predators and mosquitoes on refuge land unless certain conditions are met. The Fish and Wildlife Service is set to review those comments before the agency makes a final decision.