Distinct population segment
A distinct population segment is the smallest division of a taxonomic species permitted to be protected under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. Species, as defined in the Act for listing purposes, is a taxonomic species or subspecies of plant or animal, or in the case of vertebrate species, a distinct population segment.
Criteria for designation
The criteria for designation of a population or group of populations as a DPS was most recently articulated in a 1996 joint USFWS-NMFS policy :Three elements are considered in a decision regarding the status of a possible DPS as endangered or threatened under the Act. These are applied similarly for addition to the lists of endangered and threatened wildlife and plants, reclassification, and removal from the lists:
- Discreteness of the population segment in relation to the remainder of the species to which it belongs;
- The significance of the population segment to the species to which it belongs; and
- The population segment's conservation status in relation to the Act's standards for listing.
Discreteness
- It is markedly separated from other populations of the same taxon as a consequence of physical, physiological, ecological, or behavioral factors. Quantitative measures of genetic or morphological discontinuity may provide evidence of this separation.
- It is delimited by international governmental boundaries within which differences in control of exploitation, management of habitat, conservation status, or regulatory mechanisms exist that are significant in light of section 4 of the Act.
Significance
will then be considered in light of Congressional guidance that the authority to list DPSes be used "...sparingly" while encouraging the conservation of genetic diversity. In carrying out this examination, the Services will consider available
scientific evidence of the discrete population segment's importance to the taxon to which it belongs. This consideration may include, but is not
limited to, the following:
- Persistence of the discrete population segment in an ecological setting unusual or unique for the taxon,
- Evidence that loss of the discrete population segment would result in a significant gap in the range of a taxon,
- Evidence that the discrete population segment represents the only surviving natural occurrence of a taxon that may be more abundant elsewhere as an introduced population outside its historic range, or
- Evidence that the discrete population segment differs markedly from other populations of the species in its genetic characteristics.
information that might bear on the biological and ecological importance of a discrete population segment.