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October 14, 2008
TAOS, NM – A native New Mexican once found in streams and rivers
throughout the state has returned home after a 60-year absence.
Five river otters were released today in the waters of the Rio
Pueblo De Taos on Taos Pueblo.
The wild otters were trapped and transported from Washington by
USDA Wildlife Services and Taos Pueblo as part of a larger otter
reintroduction program organized by Taos Pueblo, The New Mexico
Department of Game and Fish, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management,
and the New Mexico Friends of River Otters, a coalition of
citizens, agencies and conservation organizations dedicated to
restoring otters to the state.
"Protecting and restoring native wildlife is important to the
heritage and ecology of New Mexico, and one of the main roles of
the Department of Game and Fish," Department Director Bruce
Thompson said. "Today’s release is a positive first step in an
effort to return otters to watersheds across the state."
River otters are highly social, playful, semi-aquatic members of
the weasel family. They are believed to have once inhabited the
Gila, upper and middle Rio Grande, Mora, San Juan and Canadian
river systems and occasionally were mentioned in the journals of
early settlers.
There have been no confirmed sightings of river otters in the
state since 1953. Decades of trapping and habitat loss are
believed to be two factors in their disappearance. Current
regulations require trappers to release any otters caught in
traps.
"We are so thrilled to see this species back in New Mexico," said
Linda Rundell, state director for the Bureau of Land Management.
"We’re working with partners throughout the state to restore
watersheds and wildlife habitat; the icing on the cake comes when
we can restore species like the river otter to their rightful
place in New Mexico."
Twenty states, including Arizona, Colorado and Utah have
successfully reintroduced river otters. River otters and other
predators play important roles in keeping communities of native
species robust and diverse.
"We are extremely excited that Taos Pueblo has taken the
initiative to ensure that our playful furbearing friends are once
again diving and swimming in the Upper Rio Grande Watershed," said
Melissa Savage with the New Mexico Friends of River Otters.
In 2006, the State Game Commission directed the Department of Game
and Fish to initiate efforts to restore otters to state waters. A
Department study identified several rivers as suitable restoration
sites, including the Upper Rio Grande, White Rock Canyon and
Middle Rio Chama in the Rio Grande Basin; and the Upper Gila,
Lower Gila and Lower San Francisco rivers in the Gila River Basin.
A second, larger release is scheduled on the main stem of the
Upper Rio Grande in November.
The New Mexico Friends of River Otters, a coalition of government
agencies and conservation organizations, plans to release
additional otters. Members include Amigos Bravos, Earth Friends
Wild Species Fund, Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of
Wildlife, Four Corners Institute, New Mexico Wildlife Federation,
Rio Grande Chapter of the Sierra Club, Upper Gila Watershed
Alliance and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.
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