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March 19. 2010 (7 photos)
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WEEK IN REVIEW
Friday
Russians might compete with Boeing for tanker c...
Police hunt for shooting suspect
Navy squadron returns to Washington this weekend
Thursday


Everett plans big upgrades for city parks
State changes mind on how to handle Darrington ...
Arlington missions worker hurt in Haiti quake r...
Wednesday


Monroe girl guilty of murder in Sultan gang sla...
Man is sentenced to 8 years in crash that killed 4
House revives bill to create jobs and renovate ...
Tuesday


Local beef — lots of it
16-year-old girl convicted in Sultan gang murder
Lawmakers start haggling budget, again
Monday


A gift for a gifted kid
An early start to allergy season
Students to have their first look at ‘WAS...
Sunday


Stillaguamish Tribe carves a link to its long-l...
Paine Field results delayed by months
The Hub, a Snohomish institution, closes
Saturday


Shock at fish killings in Mill Creek
Former Snohomish County planning director charged
Murder suspect James Fryberg back in custody
 

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Published: Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Federal agency says prairie dogs not endangered

BILLINGS, Mont. — Black-tailed prairie dogs were denied protection under the Endangered Species Act today.

The ruling came after federal officials concluded the once-common ground squirrels show signs of rebounding from decades of poisoning, shootings, the plague and loss of habitat to agriculture.

The New Mexico-based environmental activist group WildEarth Guardians petitioned the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to list the animal as threatened or endangered.

Prairie dogs once ranged over an estimated 50,000 square miles in at least 11 Central and Western states.

Federal officials say the animals now occupy about 3,750 square miles within a range that stretches from Montana and North Dakota south to New Mexico, Texas and Arizona.

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