Dixie Valley Toads Win Final Protection |
After five years of legal action by the Center for Biological Diversity, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service just finalized Endangered Species Act protection for Dixie Valley toads. These extremely rare amphibians — previously protected by an emergency order — have been under acute threat from a geothermal power plant likely to dry up the hot springs they depend on.
These black-freckled amphibians are hardly bigger than a quarter. Unfortunately their range is tiny, too — they live only in four spring-fed wetlands on about 700 acres.
“This is a significant victory,” said the Center’s Great Basin Director Patrick Donnelly. “Renewable energy is essential to combating the climate emergency, but it can’t come at the cost of extinction.” Check out this video of the newly protected toads enjoying their natural habitat on Instagram or YouTube.
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Wildlife Gets Reprieve From Lead in Refuges |
Stopping Bulldozers at the Border |
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Little Piggy Had None: Win for Two Island Plants |
Good news off the coast of California: The Fish and Wildlife Service just proposed to take two Channel Islands plants off the endangered species list because they’ve recovered. Both had been driven to the brink of extinction by nonnative sheep and feral pigs, who were grazing and trampling them into oblivion.
The Channel Island bedstraw and Santa Cruz Island dudleya were protected under the Endangered Species Act in 1997; then the sheep and pigs were removed from the islands, benefiting not just the two plants but the whole ecosystem. “Recovery can take decades, but the investment is worth it to safeguard the biodiversity we all depend on,” said the Center’s Tierra Curry. |
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Help Save Howlers, Jaguars and More From Pet Trade |
Mexico is home to howler monkeys, jaguars, sloths, parrots, and other amazing animals and plants. But many of these species are threatened with extinction, partly because of the wildlife trade. Each year thousands of animals suffer and die, plucked from their native habitats to be sold as exotic pets.
An undercover investigation by the Center revealed widespread wildlife trafficking in Mexico, often carried out shamelessly and without consequences on social media. In this video on Facebook and YouTube, you can see devastating footage sent to us by traffickers trying to entice buyers for kidnapped baby howler monkeys.
You can help: Take action to urge Mexico authorities to crack down on illegal wildlife trade and protect the nation’s incredible biodiversity. |
Emergency Protection Sought for Clear Lake Hitch |
With a coalition of Pomo advocates fighting to save the species, on Monday the Center urged Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and the Fish and Wildlife Service to give emergency protection for Northern California’s Clear Lake hitch — a fish in real danger of going extinct in the next few years. The hitch has great cultural significance for the Pomo and has been a primary food source for generations.
“We’re talking about extinction,” said Meg Townsend, a Center attorney. “The hitch can’t withstand one more year of failed spawning. The Fish and Wildlife Service’s failure to protect this severely imperiled fish for more than a decade is shocking and unacceptable. Only emergency protection can give the hitch a fighting chance.” |
Center Visual Specialist Awarded for Monarch Video |
We’re proud to announce that the Center’s Environmental Scientist and Communicator Dipika Kadaba has won the 2022 Silver Information Is Beautiful Award from the Data Visualization Society for her timelapse animation showing the catastrophic decline of monarch butterflies.
“Monarchs are recognizable at small scales, so they can be visualized as their authentic selves,” said Dipika. “Dwindling and increasingly alone.”
The award celebrates excellence across the field of data visualization — obviously a feature of this heartbreaking animation. Check it out on Facebook or YouTube.
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Gains for Two Coastal Species in Florida |
The Revelator: Reptile Trade Blues |
That’s Wild: Mouse Psyches Move Mountains |
A new study may soon show that the minds of mice play a major role in how forest growth moves across a landscape — because the distinct personalities of mice influence which seeds, and how many, are eaten and dispersed. University of Maine biologists are using fluorescent powder to track seed collection and dispersal by thousands of deer mice (and southern red-backed voles) throughout the fall and winter.
Then they’ll look for patterns telling the story of how different critters — each categorized on a spectrum from “bold” to “shy” — decide which seeds to put where.
Previous studies have shown that unlogged forests with a mix of habitat types harbored mice with more diversity in personality — which “is a good thing, just like genetic diversity is a good thing,” said one researcher. |
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Photo credits: Dixie Valley toad by Patrick Donnelly/Center for Biological Diversity; whooping cranes by Klaus Nigge/USFWS; border wall protest by Russ McSpadden/Center for Biological Diversity; Channel Island bedstraw by Stickpen, Santa Cruz Island dudleya by H. Abbey/USFWS; baby howler monkey from Center report; Clear Lake hitch by Richard Macedo/CDFG; screenshot from monarch video by Dipika Kadaba/Center for Biological Diversity; diamondback terrapin by George L. Heinrich/FPWC, manatees by wcdumont/Flickr; blue tree monitor by H. Zell; deer mouse courtesy of USFWS.
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Center for Biological Diversity P.O. Box 710 Tucson, AZ 85702 United States |
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