Southeast Wood Storks Bounce Back, Ditch Endangered Label Forever
Published Date: 2/10/2026
Rule
Summary
Great news! The Southeast U.S. wood stork population has bounced back so well that it’s no longer considered endangered or threatened. Starting March 12, 2026, the special protections under the Endangered Species Act will be lifted, showing that conservation efforts really paid off. This change means less federal oversight but continued monitoring to keep these majestic birds thriving.
Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 2 mixed.
Federal ESA Protections End March 12, 2026
If you live, work, or own land in the Southeast U.S. wood stork range (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina), the special protections under the Endangered Species Act for the Southeast U.S. wood stork distinct population segment will be removed effective March 12, 2026. The rule says the prohibitions and conservation measures in the Act, particularly those under sections 4 and 7, will no longer apply to this wood stork DPS.
Some Wetlands May Lose Federal Oversight
The rule notes that, following a September 8, 2023 revision to the Clean Water Act regulatory definition, some wetlands previously considered jurisdictional and used by wood storks are now non-jurisdictional and may not get the same level of Federal oversight. The document also states that recent State regulatory changes in North Carolina mean isolated wetlands there are no longer State-regulated.
Ten-Year Post-Delisting Monitoring
After the wood stork is delisted, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will carry out a post-delisting monitoring (PDM) plan that includes a 10-year monitoring window to track wood stork nesting colonies and wetlands. The monitoring is intended to detect changes in the species' status so the Service can respond if the species declines.
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