How wet must a wetland be to have federal protections in post- Sackett US?
- PMID: 39325904
- DOI: 10.1126/science.adp3222
How wet must a wetland be to have federal protections in post- Sackett US?
Abstract
In 2023, the US Supreme Court's majority ruled in Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency that only wetlands that are "indistinguishable" from federally protected waters "due to a continuous surface connection" are federally protected. This study estimates the potential impact of interpretations of the ruling on federal wetlands protections, using a qualitative measure of wetland "wetness" as a proxy for the new requirement. An estimated area ranging from ~17 million acres (19%) to nearly all 90 million acres of nontidal wetlands in the conterminous United States could be without federal protections, and variability in state protections creates hotspots of risk. The high-level estimates provided here represent a first step toward understanding the long-term impacts of Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency on federal wetlands protections and highlight the uncertainty introduced by the ruling.
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