logo
Login Subscribe
Google Play App Store
  • News
    • Obituaries
    • Lifestyle
    • Opinions
  • Sports
  • E-edition
  • Public Notices
  • Calendar
  • Archives
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertisers
    • Form Submission
    • About Us
    • News
      • Obituaries
      • Lifestyle
      • Opinions
    • Sports
    • E-edition
    • Public Notices
    • Calendar
    • Archives
    • Contact
      • Contact Us
      • Advertisers
      • Form Submission
      • About Us
sports
December 20, 2023
Leading Fish and Wildlife Law marks 50 years
By Jena Donnell COURTESY,

The Endangered Species Act, the nation’s foremost law aimed at keeping plants and animals from becoming extinct, turns 50 on Dec. 28. This anniversary celebrates decades of targeted conservation efforts and dedicated partnerships and showcases the importance of future work.

The Wildlife Department has partnered with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Forest Service to conserve federally endangered redcockaded woodpeckers on the Mc-Curtain County Wilderness Area. In addition to habitat management, biologists monitor the birds’ nesting success throughout the spring. Here, a biologist holds a camera on a long pole to look in the woodpecker’s nests and sees an adult incubating eggs.

A Continued Legacy

Created to protect and recover imperiled species, the ESA builds on the legacy of other conservation-minded legislation. The first U.S. wildlife law, the Lacey Act of 1900, was motivated by the looming extinction of the passenger pigeon and initially protected wild birds from poaching. The Migratory Bird Treaty Act, passed in 1918, further protected birds migrating between the U.S. and Canada. And the Endangered Species Protection Act of 1966 created the very first list of threatened and endangered species. Among other things, the Endangered Species Act of 1973 more clearly defined threatened and endangered species – endangered species are in danger of extinction while threatened species are likely to become endangered within the foreseeable future – and allowed plants and invertebrates to be included in the list.

The Black-capped Vireo: An Endangered Species Act Success Story

The small, migratory black-capped vireo is a great case study for the importance of targeted conservation work and partnerships. With habitat and species management, the songbird recovered from a low of Before: A changing plant community, shifting from open scrubby habitat to more heavily wooded areas, and brood parasitism by native brown-headed cowbirds are thought to have been the leading causes of the black-capped vireo’s decline in its northern range. By the time the species was listed as endangered, only 350 of the migratory songbirds were known to exist. As few as 35 birds occurred in Oklahoma’s two strongholds, the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge and adjacent Fort Sill military installation.

After: In the decades following the vireo’s listing, conservation agencies and land managers leaned on prescribed fire and brown-headed cowbird removal to reverse the bird’s decline. Fire can improve the vireo’s breeding habitat by thinning the overall tree canopy and promoting the preferred nesting structures. And removing cowbirds from the landscape can reduce the number of young vireos that are displaced by the larger cowbird chicks. With these conservation measures and others, the vireo’s population grew to an estimated 14,000 birds, which triggered its delisting in 2018. The number of vireos at Oklahoma’s two strongholds also grew to include more than 4,000 males. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife has continued to monitor the bird, with recent surveys indicated there are now more than 22,000 black-capped vireos found in the wild.

The Power of Partners

In addition to providing federal protections to listed species, the ESA encourages states to develop and maintain conservation programs to better safeguard the nation’s heritage in fish, wildlife, and plants. In Oklahoma, the Wildlife Department partners with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to fund surveys and management projects to conserve and monitor the status of the state’s threatened, endangered, and ESA-candidate species.

More than 125 Oklahoma-based projects have been funded by provisions of the ESA’s Cooperative Endangered Species Fund, with the state’s first project focusing on the now delisted black-capped vireo. These “Section 6” projects, and those funded by other conservation grant programs, have not only helped conservation agencies learn more about the needs and status of listed species, but also provide important data for listing decisions.

The Wildlife Department has shared data for species recently proposed for federal listing, including the alligator snapping turtle, tricolored bat, and pyramid pigtoe mussel.

Data are being shared on Oklahoma’s known populations of other petitioned species, including the Kiamichi crayfish, regal fritillary, little brown bat, southern plains bumble bee, Arogos skipper, and peppered shiner.

The USFWS used data on the Ozark emerald, Oklahoma salamander, Arkansas darter, plains spotted skunk, and seaside alder provided by ODWC to decide listings for these species weren’t warranted.

Eufaula losing two prominent citizens
A: Main, news
Eufaula losing two prominent citizens
By JERRY FINK MANAGING EDITOR 
December 31, 2025
Robyn and Randy Burris, two of Eufaula’s leading citizens who are shining examples of what it means to be community spirited, will be leaving in January for Sheridan, Ark., just south of Little Rock. ...
2025: Year in review
A: Main, news
2025: Year in review
By JERRY FINK MANAGING EDITOR 
December 31, 2025
The year 2025 was an eventful one for Eufaula. Many local residents joined forces to help defeat the creation of a wind turbine farm in the county. The Muscogee Nation opened its Lake Eufaula Casino i...
A: Main, news
The subsidy cliff: What the end of ACA subsidies means for McIntosh County
By Staff Reports 
December 31, 2025
Congress has allowed the Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies, which significantly lowered premiums for millions, to expire on December 31, 2025. There is no stopgap and no extension. While Washington ...
Steele pleads guilty to robbery
A: Main, news
Steele pleads guilty to robbery
By JERRY FINK MANAGING EDITOR 
December 31, 2025
Dallas Allen Steele, 38, Checotah, has pled guilty to robbery with a weapon and possession of a firearm after a former felony conviction. On Dec. 10, Associate District Judge Brendon Bridges sentenced...
WMU Alliance prepare gifts for nursing home
news
WMU Alliance prepare gifts for nursing home
December 31, 2025
The Woman’s Missionary Union (WMU) recently wrapped gifts for residents of Lakeview Nursing home. Woman’s Missionary Union (WMU), founded in 1888, is the largest Protestant mission’s organization for ...
Merit vs. equity in college football
commentary
Merit vs. equity in college football
December 31, 2025
Now that the playoffs are set, it’s worth taking a moment to understand the flaws and biases built into the college football ranking system. While fairness may be an interesting word, I’m someone who ...
ePaper
google_play
app_store
Editor Picks
We all need Jesus
commentary
We all need Jesus
December 31, 2025
Another year around the sun and as I turned 57 on Dec. 30 I realize that no matter how old we get – we all need Jesus. Though the world may label us old, out dated or off our rockers, the truth is wit...
A very busy 2025 for children
commentary
A very busy 2025 for children
By JOE DORMAN OICA CEO 
December 31, 2025
OKLAHOMA CITY – It is hard to believe that 2025 has come to an end. For those of us at the Oklahoma Institute for Child Advocacy (OICA), I must say that our work felt incredibly important this year wi...
news
A Writer Returns: The Spirit of Posey, and the Souls of Eufaula
By MICHAEL BARNES 
December 31, 2025
There are journeys we plan, and journeys we are called into. After my wife passed nearly three years ago, I became a quiet traveler—wandering, grieving, watching life from a distance. For two years, I...
commentary
Christmas Is Over – Now What??
By REV. THERESE STARR 
December 31, 2025
It still catches my attention every year how all the preparation, excitement, stress, busy-ness, and joy of Christmas all seem to suddenly drop away, leaving almost nothing behind, once the celebratio...
commentary
New Year resolutions will work — if you’re aligned with God!
By LENORE BECHTEL 
December 31, 2025
New Year resolutions will work—if you’re aligned with God! The gap between Christmas and the New Year is generally when people plan life improvements for the next 365 days. This past Sunday LECC Assoc...
Facebook

THE EUFAULA INDIAN JOURNAL
100 N. 2nd Street
Eufaula, OK 74432

(918) 689-2191

This site complies with ADA requirements

© 2023 THE EUFAULA INDIAN JOURNAL

  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Policy