From the Yellowstone fly fishing blog comes this truly saddening news from the Billings Gazette:

“Non-native lake trout patrolling Yellowstone Lake are eating so deeply into the population that biologists last year found just 471 cutthroats at a spot where there were more than 70,000 in the 1970s.

The downward spiral has been particularly noticeable at that spot – Clear Creek on the eastern edge of Yellowstone Lake – over the last several years. After biologists counted 6,613 cutthroats in 2002, the number dropped to 3,432 in 2003, 1,438 in 2004, 917 in 2005 and 471 last spring, according to numbers released Wednesday.

They are the lowest numbers since record keeping began in 1945.”

Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout in trouble
Is the fat lady singing for Yellowstone Lake Cutthroats?

Interesting also is the response of the Feds:

Though Yellowstone cutthroat are struggling to survive in and around Yellowstone Lake – long one of the population’s strongholds – the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service declined last year to put the species on the federal endangered species list.

This goes hand in hand with the Fed’s recent decision to not list the Fluvial Grayling, despite the fact it’s all but disappeared.

Then again, it’s hardly surprising; a recent congressional hearing found that scientifically derived recommendations for species listings and protections were often ignored, excised, or even rewritten to deliver the exact opposite recommendation.

Often done by political appointees with not expertise in the field, it’s become clear that this was typically done to benefit corporate interests (certainly not the general public).

If you follow the politics of the environment, this hardly comes as a shock; this practice has been rampant since the first days of the current administration.

Good luck, Yellowstone Cutts. You’re going to need it.

[tags]fly fishing, yellowstone, lake trout, cutthroat, trout[/tags]