March 16, 2017 / Modified mar 16, 2017 12:21 p.m.

Blocking Biodiversity: Why a 'Great Wall' Might Not Be Great for Wildlife

A border wall could impact numerous endangered species, including jaguars.

Merrill and Sugar Laura Merrill and her adopted wild burro, Sugar, take a stroll.
Maya Springhawk Robnett, Arizona Science Desk

In the Sonoran Desert, the loudest animal sound you’re likely to hear, if you’re lucky, is the braying of a wild burro.

When Laura Merrill takes one of her adopted burros, Sugar, out of the pen, the other burro, Sonny, runs back and forth along the gate, desperately looking for a way to get to her companion.

Sonny’s behavior is indicative of the way wildlife experts say most animals treat barriers: They don’t know how to get around them. That’s why a proposed uninterrupted wall along the U.S.-Mexican border worries wildlife experts.


Kelly Glenn Kimbro Douglas Arizona Kelly Glenn Kimbro leans against the post-on-rail barrier on the border near Douglas, Arizona.
Maya Springhawk Robnett, Arizona Science Desk

Near Douglas, Arizona, Kelly Glenn Kimbro’s family has owned the ranch on the American side of the vehicular barricade for more than six decades. Though the Glenns are Trump supporters, Kimbro said this is the only barrier they need.

“We don’t want a wall. It isn’t going to stop 10 people. We saw a funny thing at Walmart in Douglas right after Trump was elected. My daughter and I saw a truck with Sonoran license plates, going to Mexico, with twelve ladders on it. And we were like, ‘Oh my gosh! This man’s going into business!’”

The Glenns are part of a ranchers’ conservationist outfit called the Malpai Borderlands Group. Twenty-three years ago, the group was more concerned with preserving wide-open spaces. Now, they have another focus, said executive director Bill McDonald.


Bill McDonald Douglas Arizona Bill McDonald, rancher, conservationist and executive director of the Malpai Borderlands Group, stands at the U.S.-Mexican border near Douglas, Arizona.
Maya Springhawk Robnett, Arizona Science Desk

“I think we’re very concerned that a wall would stop natural migration corridors for a lot of these animals. There’s a big difference between a barrier that has gaps in it that allows wildlife to go through and one that doesn’t,” he said.

Arizona Game and Fish Department officials have said they’re focused on wildlife populations and don’t typically respond to individual reports of wildlife injuries. So when an injured animal is brought in or reported on the border, they must rely on volunteers.

We don't want a wall. It isn't going to stop 10 people" - rancher Kelly Glenn Kimbro

Cecilia Vigil, a doctor of veterinary medicine in Yuma, is one of those volunteers. On a recent day outside a small aviary on the Arizona Western College campus she was caring for a red-tailed hawk recovering from poisoning. Initially, she didn’t think he’d make it. Vigil worries more animals might not make it.


Cecilia Vigil Red Tailed hawk Arizona Game and Fish volunteer Cecilia Vigil holds an injured red-tailed hawk at the Arizona Western College campus aviary.
Maya Springhawk Robnett, Arizona Science Desk

“You put those walls up and they can’t cross-pollinate. They can’t pass those genes and mix them up,” she said. “Once you lose that biodiversity, it affects the population in very devastating ways.”

Vigil was referring to fragmentation, or the splitting of animal populations, which causes inbreeding and cuts them off from their primary food and water sources.

A border wall could impact numerous endangered species, including jaguars. Three jaguars have been spotted in Arizona since 2015; only seven have been documented here in the last 21 years.

Bryon Strom for the Yuma Sector Border Patrol isn’t ignorant of wildlife’s plight. He took part in the recovery program for one endangered species, the Sonoran pronghorn antelope. But Strom said he thinks the current barriers on the border aren’t a major problem for wildlife.

“Where there’s a will, there’s a way. And where we’ve done environmental impact studies, the right fence is in the right place to allow that to happen.”

Thirty-seven environmental laws were waived in order to put up the existing barriers on the border, including the requirement to perform environmental impact studies. Strom says the Border Patrol conducted its own assessments. But Dan Millis with the Sierra Club calls them “window dressing.”

Some watered-down environmental assessments have been written up and rubber stamped. It’s not enough to protect the environment" - Dan Millis, Sierra Club

Much of the border is shaped by rivers, so sections of concrete wall have led to floods in desert areas, Millis said, adding that an uninterrupted wall would also cut off many animals’ access to water.

"For the Border Patrol to say, ‘Where there’s a will, there’s a way,’ is really emblematic of how people respond to the wall, not wildlife. Mountain lions don’t throw ropes over the wall. Deer are not able to construct a ladder and go over the wall."

Arizona Science Desk
This story is from the Arizona Science Desk, a collaborative of the state's public radio stations, including NPR 89.1. Read more from the Arizona Science Desk.
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