Defenders of Wildlife v. United States Fish and Wildlife Service

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedJuly 23, 2025
Docket4:24-cv-00073
StatusUnknown

This text of Defenders of Wildlife v. United States Fish and Wildlife Service (Defenders of Wildlife v. United States Fish and Wildlife Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Defenders of Wildlife v. United States Fish and Wildlife Service, (E.D.N.C. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA EASTERN DIVISION No. 4:24-CV-73-BO-BM

DEFENDERS OF WILDLIFE and ) SIERRA CLUB, ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) ORDER ) THE UNITED STATES FISH AND ) WILDLIFE SERVICE, MARTHA ) WILLIAMS, in her official capacity as ) Director of the United States Fish and ) Wildlife Service; MICHAEL OETKER, ) in his official capacity as Southeast Regional) Director of the United States Fish and ) Wildlife Service; COUNCIL ON ) ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY; BRENDA) MALLORY, in her official capacity as ) Chair of the Council on Environmental ) Quality, ) Defendants. )

This cause comes before the Court on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. The appropriate responses and replies have been filed and a hearing on the motions was held before the undersigned on May 2, 2025, at Raleigh, North Carolina. In this posture, the motions are ripe for ruling. For the reasons that follow, both motions are granted in part and denied in part. BACKGROUND I. Parties The United States Fish and Wildlife Service (the “Service”) is a federal agency responsible for management and conservation efforts in the National Wildlife Refuge System, which includes the Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge (the “Refuge’”). See 16 U.S.C. §§ 668dd-668ee. As

part of their duties, the Service is required to ensure agency compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”), the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act (“Refuge Act”), and other laws. [DE 21] 32, 33. The Council on Environmental Quality (“CEQ”) is a federal agency within the Executive Office of the President which is responsible for overseeing the implementation of NEPA and promulgating regulations to be utilized by federal agencies in following NEPA. [DE 1] § 37; [DE 21] 37. Along with the various local, state, and federal agencies responsible for conservation efforts, plaintiffs Defenders of Wildlife and the Sierra Club (collectively “plaintiffs” or the “Conservation Groups”), along with their members and supporters, also have an interest in the protection and restoration of the Refuge. The Conservation Groups are nonprofit organizations who participated in the NEPA process, submitted comments on the experimental treatment at issue in this case (the “Project”), and participated in facial challenges to 2020 NEPA regulations promulgated by the CEQ. [DE 1] f{ 14-27, 30; [DE 21] {ff 18, 21, 27. II. Factual background The Refuge is located on the Albemarle-Pamlico Peninsula in eastern North Carolina and contains Lake Mattamuskeet (the “Lake”), the largest natural lake in North Carolina which spans approximately 40,000 acres. Located at roughly the mid-point of the Atlantic Flyway!, the Lake is a critical resource to migratory birds and provides food and habitat to over 250 species and

' The Service “and its partners manage migratory birds based largely on routes the birds follow as they migrate between nesting and wintering areas. Based on those routes, four administrative Flyways (Atlantic, Mississippi, Central and Pacific) were established in North America to facilitate management of migratory birds and their habitats.” https://www.fws.gov/partner/migratory-bird- program-administrative-fly ways (last visited July 22, 2025).

hundreds of thousands of individual birds who regularly visit or reside there. FWS_000021; FWS_000027.” The Lake is a shallow basin with an average depth of two feet. Id. One of the most difficult challenges facing conservation efforts at the Lake involves submerged aquatic vegetation (“SAV”), a vital food resource for migratory birds who visit the Lake. FWS_000021. The Lake’s vegetation was previously dominated by SAV, such as wild celery and redhead grass, which provided a “critical component of the aquatic ecosystem[.]” Jd. The SAV not only serves as a primary food source for wintering waterfowl, but also helps to stabilize the substrate and provide habitat for fish and other species. Jd. The presence, or absence, of SAV is an indicator of the overall health of the Lake. FWS_003756; FWS_003766. Since at least 1981, invasive carp, runoff, and nutrient pollution have caused significant decreases in SAV in the Lake, which in turn allows for increases in the presence of blue-green algae, also known as cyanobacteria. FWS_000021. Cyanobacteria blooms are themselves problematic because they prevent sunlight from reaching SAV, thereby hindering SAV growth. Id. At least in part due to diminished food resources resulting from the loss of SAV, there has been a sharp reduction in migratory bird populations at the Lake, from over 30,000 mid-winter tundra swans in 2008 to fewer than 10,000 in 2016. FWS_00027. In 2018, the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission, North Carolina Coastal Federation, Hyde County, and the Service released the Lake Mattamuskeet Watershed Restoration Plan (the “Watershed Plan”), which was the result of a combined effort by these groups to improve the water quality of the Lake. FWS_000021-22. The Watershed Plan identified two priority actions to improve the Lake’s water quality, decrease cyanobacteria, and increase SAV: reducing both

2 Citations to FWS_000 and NEPA_000 are to the Bates numbered pages of the Administrative Record lodged with the Court. [DE 29]. Docket entry page number citations are to the CM/ECF- stamped page numbers.

carp biomass and external nutrient loading from runoff. FWS_009059. Work has begun on a $1 million contract aimed at removing carp from the Lake. FWS_009093; FWS_009351; FWS_000028. The Conservation Groups maintain that the Watershed Plan is focused on long- term solutions, which do not include short-term algaecide use. [DE 28] at 11 (citing FWS_003598- 601). Despite some disagreement over the origins of the Project,’ the parties agree that, in approximately September 2022, the University of North Carolina Collaboratory (the “Collaboratory”) contacted the Mattamuskeet Refuge Manager and Refuge Biologist about using BlueGreen Water Technologies’ algaecide product, LakeGuard Oxy, at the Lake to treat cyanobacteria. FWS_000022. LakeGuard Oxy is a sodium percarbonate-based algaecide which the Environmental Protection Agency labels as “toxic to birds”. FWS_000018; FWS_000105- FWS_000111. The EPA has also indicated that LakeGuard Oxy’s active ingredient should carry a label stating that it should be kept out of ponds, lakes, and streams and that it is toxic to aquatic invertebrates, fish, and birds. FWS_003544. Implementation of LakeGuard Oxy at the Lake would involve four treated bays, totaling around 400 acres, and four untreated control bays, isolated through turbidity curtains. FWS_000023-24.

3 According to the Conservation Groups, BlueGreen Water Technologies registered several representatives as lobbyists with the North Carolina Secretary of State in May of 2021. See FWS_000291. The Conservation Groups assert that a few months later, the North Carolina General Assembly directed the University of North Carolina Collaboratory to “conduct a study to ‘evaluate the effectiveness and efficacy’ of an algaecide treatment” in North Carolina waters. [DE 28] at 9 (citing 129 Session Law 2021-180, Senate Bill 105, at part II, Section 8.18). The Conservation Groups further contend that the language of the bill, which specified criteria for the algaecide product they would select, “made it a foregone conclusion BlueGreen’s Lake Guard Oxy” would be selected. [DE 28] at 10 (citing 129 Session Law 2021-180, Senate Bill 105, at part II, Section 8.18).

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Bluebook (online)
Defenders of Wildlife v. United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/defenders-of-wildlife-v-united-states-fish-and-wildlife-service-nced-2025.