Federal Court Rules Domestic Sheep Lease Poses Unacceptable Threat to Bighorns on Colorado National Forest

For Immediate Release: May 12, 2025

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Federal Court Rules Domestic Sheep Lease Poses Unacceptable Threat to Bighorns on Colorado National Forest

The U.S. Forest Service ignored crucial data in their creation of the Wishbone Allotment on the Rio Grande National Forest, amplifying risk of disease transmission to sensitive wild sheep.

DENVER — On Friday, the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals handed down a major conservation victory for bighorn sheep conservation on the Rio Grande National Forest. The court ruled the U.S. Forest Service unlawfully disregarded scientific findings and arbitrarily altered the findings of its disease ‘Risk of Contact’ modeling when it approved domestic sheep grazing on the Rio Grande National Forest near Creede, Colorado in 2018. The agency approved the creation of the Wishbone domestic sheep allotment in close proximity to bighorn sheep core habitats despite concluding in 2013 and 2015 that contact with domestic sheep posed a high level of disease risk to the area’s bighorn sheep populations.

This contact is dangerous because of two deadly pathogens, Mannheimia haemolycta and Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae, that domestic sheep carry and transmit to bighorn sheep. Once a wild sheep is infected through contact with a domestic sheep, they carry that pathogen back to their herd and even to other herds, which can lead to catastrophic, all-age die-offs. There are currently at least seven herds in Colorado that are experiencing population collapse due to illnesses from domestic sheep.

Four bighorn herds inhabit national forest lands near the newly-invented Wishbone Allotment: the San Luis Peak, Bellows Creek, Bristol Head and Rock Creek herds. Three other bighorn populations live within easy traveling distance for a bighorn ram: the Weminuche population to the south, the Natural Arch/Carnero population to the east, and the San Juan West population to the west. Overall, approximately 1,100 bighorn sheep are at risk from domestic sheep grazing on the Wishbone Allotment.

“Bighorn sheep on public land should be protected by the Forest Service, but in this case the agencies violated the public trust – and federal law – to facilitate commercial sheep use near critical bighorn sheep habitats,” said Delaney Rudy, Colorado Director for the Western Watershed Project. “We are relieved by the court’s assertion that the Forest Service can’t choose to turn a blind eye to the acute threat that domestic sheep grazing poses to wild bighorns.”

The Forest Service itself has recognized disease as “the greatest concern for bighorn sheep population persistence [in] the Rio Grande National Forest.” Bighorn sheep on the Rio Grande N.F. are designated as a species of conservation concern, a designation that requires all agency actions to be analyzed for their potential impact to bighorn sheep and maintain bighorn sheep population viability.

“The Forest Service previously decided to vacate adjacent and overlapping domestic sheep grazing allotments because of the high risk they posed to bighorn sheep,” said Laurie Rule, senior attorney at Advocates for the West, who represented conservation organizations in the lawsuit. “But the agency then ignored the same threat in approving the new allotment. The Tenth Circuit recognized that decision was unreasonable and not supported by the science and data in the record.”

“This is an important victory for bighorn sheep and for the requirement that agencies ground their decisions on facts,” said Chris Krupp of WildEarth Guardians. “Here, the Forest Service knew that bighorns would likely come into contact with domestic sheep, but it put its finger on the scale to reach the conclusion it wanted. That’s always unacceptable, but especially so here when the consequences to Colorado’s state animal are so deadly.”

The 10th Circuit held that the agency’s explanation for approving the Wishbone Allotment relied “on no science or data, and in fact contradicts the data in the record about bighorn sheep movement and permittees’ compliance with project design features.”

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Western Watersheds Project (WWP) is a non-profit organization with more than 14,000 members and supporters. WWP’s mission is to protect and restore western watersheds and wildlife through education, public policy initiatives, and legal advocacy. WWP works to ensure that public lands and their wildlife, cultural, and natural resources are protected for future generations.

WildEarth Guardians is a conservation nonprofit whose mission is to protect and restore the wildlife, wild places, wild rivers, and health of the American West. Guardians has offices in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, and Washington, and over 189,000 members and supporters worldwide.

Advocates for the West is a nonprofit, public interest environmental law firm that protects and defends the West’s public lands, water, fish, and wildlife.

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