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Greater sage grouse jockey for position and strut in the predawn light during mating season on a ranch in Craig. The bird experienced a 56 percent drop in breeding males in the U.S. in 2013, to 48,641 from 109,990 in 2007.
Greater sage grouse jockey for position and strut in the predawn light during mating season on a ranch in Craig. The bird experienced a 56 percent drop in breeding males in the U.S. in 2013, to 48,641 from 109,990 in 2007.
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BILLINGS, Mont. — Officials in Idaho and Nevada and some mining companies sued the federal government over new restrictions on mining, energy development and grazing that are intended to protect the greater sage grouse across millions of acres of the American West.

The cases are the first to contest the Obama administration’s declaration this week that it can protect the greater sage grouse without hobbling the region’s economy. Some Republicans and critics from the mining and energy industries contend that the restrictions imposed instead of Endangered Species Act protections for the bird were equally onerous.

Idaho Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter said Friday that federal officials wrongly ignored local efforts to protect the bird, leading him to sue in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. A similar lawsuit was filed in Nevada by an attorney for two counties and the mining companies Quantum Minerals LLC and Western Exploration LLC.

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