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Research Article

The Texas Conservation Plan has not slowed oil and gas well development in dunes sagebrush lizard habitat

[version 1; peer review: 1 approved with reservations, 1 not approved]
PUBLISHED 21 Jun 2018
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This article is included in the Ecology and Global Change gateway.

Abstract

Background: The dunes sagebrush lizard (Sceloporus arenicolus) is an imperiled species that is restricted to shinnery oak (Quercus havardii) sand dune habitats in southeastern New Mexico and West Texas, USA. This region is also a hotspot of oil and gas development that is a major threat to the species.
Methods: Here we use well data and a natural experiment to test the effectiveness of voluntary conservation agreements for slowing or stopping oil and gas well approval in the lizard’s habitat in New Mexico and Texas.
Results: We show that the Candidate Conservation Agreement (CCA) and CCA with Assurances in New Mexico, both of which contain strong avoidance mechanisms, are associated with a steep decline in oil and gas well approval in the New Mexico portion of the lizard’s range, but not outside the lizard’s range. By contrast, the Texas Conservation Plan (TCP), which does not include mandatory avoidance, is not associated with any decline of oil and gas well approval in the lizard's Texas range relative to the broader landscape.
Conclusions: These results indicate that the TCP is insufficient to conserve the lizard in Texas, thereby jeopardizing genetic and geographic representation across the range of the species.

Keywords

Endangered Species Act, dunes sagebrush lizard, Sceloporus arenicolus, oil and gas development, voluntary conservation, Candidate Conservation Agreement

Introduction

The dunes sagebrush lizard (DSL; Sceloporus arenicolus) is an imperiled species whose distribution is restricted to shinnery oak (Quercus havardii) sand dunes in the Mescalero Sandhills of eastern New Mexico and the Monahans Sandhills of West Texas, USA (Degenhardt et al., 1996; Fitzgerald & Painter, 2009). This area is within the Permian Basin, which is the focus of extensive and intensive oil, gas, and infrastructure development that degrades or destroys the species’ habitat (Sias & Snell, 1998; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2010). The species’ perilous conservation status has been recognized since at least 1982, when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) first established S. arenicolus as a candidate for listing under the U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2010). After episodes in and out of candidate status, the FWS proposed to list the species as endangered in 2010 (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2010). That proposal was withdrawn in 2012, in large part because of voluntary conservation agreements in New Mexico and Texas that the FWS believed offered adequate protections for the species (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2012).

The agreements for New Mexico and Texas are structured very differently, but both are based on the voluntary conservation component of section 10(a)(1)(A) of the ESA. For non-listed species, these include Candidate Conservation Agreements (CCAs) and CCAs with Assurances (CCAAs; for brevity, we refer to both agreements as the “CCA/As”). CCAs are agreements between FWS and one or more public or private parties that stipulate the actions enrollees will take or will avoid to conserve a species, which may preclude the need for listing under the ESA. CCAAs are similar to CCAs, but apply only to non-federal parties and include assurances that enrollees will not face ESA restrictions beyond those described in the CCAA if the covered species is listed in the future. (Federal agencies are not eligible for CCAAs because they cannot be exempted from the duty to avoid jeopardizing listed species under section 7(a)(2).) Parties in New Mexico drafted a CCA (for federal entities) and complementary CCAA (for non-federal entities) to protect lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) and S. arenicolus habitat in December, 2008. These CCA/As include strong requirements to avoid the lizard’s shinnery oak sand dune habitats (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service et al., 2008; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Center for Excellence in Hazardous Materials Management, 2008), which reflect the practices of the Bureau of Land Management in their Range Management Plan for the species (BLM, 2008). However, the CCA/As also direct oil and gas wells into interstitial habitats (between the large sand dune blowouts that the species uses) that provide connectivity among core dunes habitats.

In contrast to the New Mexico CCA/As, the Texas Conservation Plan (TCP) for the DSL—which is a CCAA with a tailored name—does not include avoidance requirements (Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, 2011). Instead, the TCP offers only guidance to attempt to avoid habitat; there is no requirement for enrollees to avoid developing oil and gas wells in lizard habitat. Even though the same legal instrument underlies the agreement of each states—section 10(a)(1)(B) of the ESA—the differences in the details means we expect different conservation outcomes for S. arenicolus.

The objective of this study was to test whether voluntary conservation agreements for the DSL in New Mexico and Texas may have been effective at reducing oil and gas development in the species’ habitat. We hypothesized that the New Mexico CCA/As have produced a noticeable reduction of new oil and gas wells approval in DSL habitat, but that the TCP did not produce such a reduction. Our predictions were:

  • 1. The rate of new well approval through time is approximately the same inside and outside of DSL habitat before the CCA/As (2009) (in New Mexico) and before the TCP (2012) (in Texas);

  • 2. The rate of new well approval in New Mexico is lower inside of DSL habitat than outside of DSL habitat after the CCA/As were adopted; and

  • 3. The rate of new well approval in Texas is not different inside and outside of DSL habitat after the TCP was adopted.

Methods

Data identification

We downloaded all oil and gas well data for New Mexico from the state’s Oil Conservation Division site on 03 April 2018. The Texas Railroad Commission makes its oil and gas well data available through a separate provider, http://www.texas-drilling.com/, from which we downloaded the data on 03 April 2018. We filtered out well approvals that were marked as canceled in the datasets from both states. We defined the range of S. arenicolus in New Mexico as the boundaries recognized in 2008, at the time the CCA/As were developed and adopted. We defined the species’ range in Texas as the boundaries of the “Hibbitts Map” of suitable habitat (from low to very high quality; Fitzgerald et al., 2011). In New Mexico, the area outside of the species range included oil and gas well data from the Permian basin excluding the 2008 range boundaries. In Texas, the area outside included the five counties (i.e., Andrews, Crane, Ector, Ward, and Winkler) that encompass the species’ range, excluding the “Hibbitts Map.”

Data analysis

To test our hypotheses and determine the rate of oil and gas well expansion, we counted the number of wells approved each year since 1990 inside and outside of S. arenicolus habitat. Because this scenario is an intervention experiment with a before-after-control-impact design, we fit log-link Poisson generalized linear models (McCullagh & Nelder, 1999), with terms for time period and in/out of habitat, for statistical inference. We fit separate linear models, of the form number_wells ~ year + in_CCAA_area, for New Mexico and Texas data to plot the trends in/out of habitat and before/after the agreements were approved. All code and the data needed to replicate our results is available in the Open Science Foundation repository at https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/HKVSU (Malcom, 2018).

Results

The well data supported our predictions. We observed that the rate of new well approval was much lower within the DSL habitat than outside of the DSL habitat after the adoption of the CCA/As in New Mexico (Figure 1); however, the rate of new well approvals was no different inside versus outside of DSL habitat after the adoption of the TCP in Texas (Figure 2). The trends visible in the plots are supported by the generalized linear model statistics (Table 1).

8eac7520-57d5-4ee9-a479-ba4fe0acc354_figure1.gif

Figure 1. The New Mexico Candidate Conservation Agreement (CCA) and CCA with Assurances (together, CCA/As), which have strong avoidance requirements, result in a rapid decline of new well approvals in dunes sagebrush lizard habitat after their adoption in 2008.

The plot shows the number of wells approved by the State of New Mexico per year (dots), inside and outside of the lizard’s habitat (yellow and purple, respectively). Fitted lines are from a simple least-squares model of the form number_wells ~ year + in_CCAA_area, split by pre- and post-CCA/A. Figure CC-BY Defenders of Wildlife 2018, available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.6226721 (Malcom & Moskwik, 2018).

8eac7520-57d5-4ee9-a479-ba4fe0acc354_figure2.gif

Figure 2. The Texas Conservation Plan (TCP), which lacks strong avoidance requirements, has no apparent effect on new well approvals in dunes sagebrush lizard habitat versus outside of habitat after the TCP was adopted in 2012.

The plot shows the number of wells approved by the Texas Railroad Commission per year (dots), inside and outside of the lizard’s habitat (yellow and purple, respectively). Fitted lines are from a simple least-squares model of the form number_wells ~ year + in_TCP_area, split by pre- and post-TCP. CC-BY Defenders of Wildlife 2018, available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.6226964.v2 (Malcom & Moskwik, 2018).

Table 1. Parameter estimates for trends in oil and gas well approvals in and outside of Sceloporus arenicolus habitat, pre- and post-agreement in New Mexico (2009) and Texas (2012).

StateTimeParameterEstimatesezp-value
New MexicoPre-agreementYear0.0240.001416.5<2×10-16
Year:in-habitat0.0030.00430.690.487
Post-agreementYear0.0230.00366.224.85e-10
Year:in-habitat-0.1920.0115-16.7<2×10-16
TexasPre-agreementYear0.0670.001351.9<2×10-16
Year:in-habitat-0.0530.0050-10.6<2×10-16
Post-agreementYear-0.3220.0069-46.8<2×10-16
Year:in-habitat0.1270.03563.563.74×10-4

se, standard error.

Discussion

Conserving the DSL requires protecting its remaining habitat in both New Mexico and Texas: if the species is lost from either state then representation (Shaffer & Stein, 2000)—both in terms of unique genetic contributions (Chan et al., 2009; Chan et al., 2013) and geographical distribution—will be lost. Our analyses indicate that the CCA/As in New Mexico have significantly reduced oil and gas development, one of the most notable direct threats to the DSL and its habitat. In contrast to New Mexico, the data show that the TCP has had no effect on the rate of new well approval inside DSL habitat in Texas. This research highlights how the details of voluntary conservation agreements, even those authorized under the exact same provision of law, can lead to markedly different outcomes.

The decline in the number of new oil and gas wells approved each year in New Mexico after the CCA/As were adopted reflect the avoidance requirements in those agreements. The number of new wells approved in the DSL’s range in New Mexico is not zero since the CCA/As were enacted because the agreements allow well siting in interstitial habitat. While this reduces the direct effects of development, it likely harms connectivity (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2008) and may have secondary effects on landscape characteristics that influence DSL life history (Ryberg et al., 2015).

Because the TCP does not require avoidance of DSL habitat loss, i.e., there is no mechanism protecting the habitat, we expected to not see any effect of the TCP. The data supported our prediction, and even hint that the rate outside DSL habitat decreased faster than inside. Had the State of Texas incorporated strong avoidance requirements of the New Mexico CCA/As into the TCP, then our analysis may have shown that voluntary conservation efforts were sufficient to protect the DSL.

Data availability

In addition to obtaining the data as described in the manuscript, the raw oil and gas well data associated with this article can also be found on OSF: https://osf.io/hkvsu/ (Malcom, 2018).

Software availability

Software available from: https://github.com/jacob-ogre/DSL_well_approvals.

Archived software at time of publication: https://osf.io/hkvsu/ (Malcom, 2018).

License: BSD 2-Clause "Simplified" License.

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Malcom J and Moskwik M. The Texas Conservation Plan has not slowed oil and gas well development in dunes sagebrush lizard habitat [version 1; peer review: 1 approved with reservations, 1 not approved]. F1000Research 2018, 7:824 (https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.15346.1)
NOTE: If applicable, it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article.
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Key to Reviewer Statuses VIEW
ApprovedThe paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested
Approved with reservations A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit.
Not approvedFundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions
Version 1
VERSION 1
PUBLISHED 21 Jun 2018
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Reviewer Report 21 Jan 2019
Philip N.  Smith, Department of Environmental Toxicology, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX, USA 
Not Approved
VIEWS 24
Introduction
The sentence beginning “After episodes in and out of candidate status,…”is nebulous and uninformative. What are the episodes that are alluded to? In order to provide necessary context, it would appear that those episodes should be described to ... Continue reading
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CITE
HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT
Smith PN . Reviewer Report For: The Texas Conservation Plan has not slowed oil and gas well development in dunes sagebrush lizard habitat [version 1; peer review: 1 approved with reservations, 1 not approved]. F1000Research 2018, 7:824 (https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.16721.r40292)
NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article.
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22
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Reviewer Report 02 Jul 2018
Howard L. Snell, Department of Biology , Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA 
Approved with Reservations
VIEWS 22
Article provides a potential analysis of the efficacy of various types of agreements among parties to protect species that could have been listed as endangered by the US Fish & Wildlife Service.  A comparison between the pattern of permits issued ... Continue reading
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CITE
HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT
Snell HL. Reviewer Report For: The Texas Conservation Plan has not slowed oil and gas well development in dunes sagebrush lizard habitat [version 1; peer review: 1 approved with reservations, 1 not approved]. F1000Research 2018, 7:824 (https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.16721.r35353)
NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article.

Comments on this article Comments (0)

Version 1
VERSION 1 PUBLISHED 21 Jun 2018
Comment
Alongside their report, reviewers assign a status to the article:
Approved - the paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested
Approved with reservations - A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit.
Not approved - fundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions
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