Official Nebraska Government Website
    NEBRASKA GAME AND PARKS COMMISSION Tuesday, February 09, 2010    
  Wildlife Fishing Hunting State Parks Boating
NGPC Homepage
HOME
NEBRASKAland Magazine
  Fishing Hunting State Parks Boating
home >> wildlife >> programs >> nongame wildlife    
 
Nongame Wildlife Menu

  Nongame Program

Endangered and Threatened Wildlife

Swift fox
Swift fox

Efforts on behalf of endangered and threatened species are categorized as:

  • Population and Distribution Surveys
  • Research
  • Restoration
  • State Agency Consultation
  • Listing process

Nesting colonies of the endangered least tern and threatened piping plover are documented and monitored to determine reproductive success and to delineate essential nesting habitat. Data is used to identify management practices necessary for restoration of the two species. River sandbars have been cleared of vegetation to provide suitable nesting habitat. Nesting colonies susceptible to human disturbance are posted with signs to prevent intrusions.

Wintering bald eagle concentrations and whooping crane migration stopover sites are being documented and monitored so that threatened, essential habitat can be protected.

Research on the swift fox, blow-out penstemon, least tern and mountain plover, conducted by universities under contract with the Game and Parks Commission, has identified factors limiting the survival of species, and has helped determine how the species can be restored or how further population declines can be prevented.

The endangered blow-out penstemon is now being propagated in University of Nebraska greenhouses and successfully transplanted to suitable habitat in the Nebraska Sandhills.

Listing of endangered and threatened species identifies those animals and plants whose continued existence in Nebraska is in jeopardy. Efforts can then be made to restore the species or to prevent extirpation or extinction. Once a species is listed, state law automatically prohibits take, exportation and possession, and imposes severe penalties on violators. Over 1,000 proposed projects that would be authorized, funded, or carried out by state agencies are reviewed annually as part of a mandatory consultation process designed to prevent a state action from jeopardizing the existence of an endangered or threatened species.

State recovery plans for all endangered or threatened species identify, describe and schedule the actions necessary to restore populations of these animals and plants to a more secure status. Plans are implemented on a priority basis, dealing first with species in the most immediate danger, whose life requirements are best known, and those which offer the best opportunity for success. A variety of wildlife management techniques are used, including reintroduction, captive propagation, protection of habitat through various forms of acquisition, habitat manipulation and development, public education, and strict legal protection.

Efforts are being made to re-establish breeding populations of several wildlife species that were extirpated from the state long ago. The first step on the road to recovery of the endangered river otter has occurred as the result of over 100 animals, captured in other states and Canadian provinces, being transported to Nebraska and released into major river drainages.

Reintroduction of the peregrine falcon is under way through the release of captive-bred birds to the tops of buildings in downtown Omaha (Woodman Tower and Mutual of Omaha). The intent is to imprint the birds to the urban environment, thus encouraging them to eventually nest on Omaha buildings. Future efforts will also be made to release peregrines in the Pine Ridge of northwestern Nebraska in an attempt to restore a small breeding population th'at existed in the early 1900s. Studies are under way to determine the feasibility of re-establishing breeding populations of other endangered species such as the bald eagle, eastern chipmunk and black-footed ferret.

Extinct Gone Forever
Endangered Nearing Extinction
Threatened Facing Endangerment

Endangered Species of Nebraska

Common Name Scientific Name State Status Federal Status
Birds - 6 species
Eskimo Curlew Numenius borealisEndangeredEndangered
Whooping Crane Grus americanaEndangeredEndangered
Interior Least Tern Sternula antillarum athalassosEndangeredEndangered
Bald Eagle Haliaeetus leucophalus  
Piping Plover Charadrius melodusThreatenedThreatened
Mountain Plover Charadrius montanusThreatened 
 
Mammals - 5 species
Black-footed Ferret Mustela nigripes EndangeredEndangered
Swift FoxVulpes veloxEndangered 
River Otter Lutra canadensisThreatened 
Southern Flying SquirrelGlaucomys volansThreatened 
 
Fish - 7 species
Pallid SturgeonScaphirhyncus albusEndangeredEndangered
Topeka ShinerNotropis topekaEndangeredEndangered
Sturgeon chubMacrhybopsis gelidaEndangered 
Blacknose shinerNotropis heterolepisEndangered
Lake sturgeonAcipenser fulvescensThreatened 
Northern Redbelly DacePhoxinus eosThreatened
Finescale DacePhoxinus neogaeusThreatened
Insects - 2 species
American Burying BeetleNicrophorus americanusEndangeredEndangered
Salt Creek Tiger BeetleCincindela nevadica lincolnianaEndangeredEndangered
Reptiles - 1 species
MassasaugaSistrurus catenatusThreatened 
Mussels - 1 species
Scaleshell MusselLeptodea leptodonEndangeredEndangered
Plants - 7 species
Hayden's (blowout) penstemonPenstemon haydeniiEndangeredEndangered
Colorado Butterfly PlantGaura neomexicana coloradensisEndangeredThreatened
SaltwortSalicornia rubraEndangered 
Western Prairie Fringed OrchidPlatanthera praeclaraThreatenedThreatened
Ute Lady's TressesSpiranthes diluvialisThreatenedThreatened
GinsengPanax quinquefoliumThreatened 
Small White Lady's SlipperCypripedium candidumThreatened

For more information contact:

Kristal Stoner
Environmental Analyst Supervisor
Nebraska Game and Parks Commission
2200 N. 33rd St.
Lincoln, NE 68503
(402) 471-0641

Top
    NEBRASKA GAME AND PARKS COMMISSION
2200 N. 33rd St., Lincoln, NE 68503 • (402) 471-0641 •

State of Nebraska Home Page SSL