Those 700 or so grizzly bears around Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks are safe — at least for now.
A federal appeals court in San Francisco ruled this past week that the bears living in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem — which includes 34,000 square miles in parts of Montana, Idaho and Wyoming — will remain federally protected under the Endangered Species Act.
The decision, issued Wednesday by the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, affirmed a 2018 District Court ruling that required the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to put grizzly bears back on the endangered species list after the agency removed them in 2017.
The ruling means it is still illegal to hunt grizzly bears for sport in the designated area. The issue has been a source of contention and lawsuits for more than a decade.
In her decision, Judge Mary Schroeder echoed the District Court's ruling. Delisting the grizzly bears failed to consider the long-term genetic effects on other grizzly bear populations across the country, she wrote. The court also ordered the Fish and Wildlife Service to "conduct a 'comprehensive review' of the remnant grizzly population."
The decision to delist the grizzly bear violated the Endangered Species Act because it was "the result of political pressure by the states rather than having been based on the best scientific and commercial data."
Environmentalists and Indigenous tribes involved in the lawsuit said the appeals court decision was a modest victory for the grizzly bear, but added that they expected further efforts by the federal government to have it delisted in the future.
A spokesman for the Fish and Wildlife Service said that the agency is disappointed in the ruling and "continues to believe, based on the best available science, that grizzly bears in this ecosystem are biologically recovered and no longer require protection under the Endangered Species Act."