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Bumblebee on a yellow flower and male sage grouse with tail fanned out

No. 1257, August 8, 2024

 

Win Helps Protect Millions of Acres From Pesticides

The Center for Biological Diversity and allies just won a lawsuit against a federal program allowing insecticide spraying on millions of acres in 17 western states.

Overseen and funded by a secretive U.S. Department of Agriculture agency, the program was created to kill grasshoppers and crickets who compete with livestock for forage. Among other things, a judge ruled, the program failed to consider how its toxic chemicals can also kill insects who support a rich diversity of western wildlife — including iconic and declining species like greater sage grouse. Now the agency has to fully consider the environmental harms of pesticides it wants to spray (and consider less harmful alternatives).

“For decades the Department of Agriculture has drenched millions of acres of western ecosystems with deadly insecticides,” said the Center’s Environmental Health Director Lori Ann Burd. “Bees, butterflies, sage grouse, and other critters are joining us in celebrating this.”

 
Fluffy wolverine looking out from behind a tree trunk

New Suit Filed Over Weak Endangered Species Rules

The Center and allies have once again filed suit over damage done to the Endangered Species Act in 2019 that still hasn’t been fully fixed. In response to our previous legal action, in April the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and NOAA Fisheries tried to restore the Act’s strength with some new rules — but they left many harmful others intact. As the rules stand now, species from wolverines to walruses won’t get enough protection to survive.

“It’s really disappointing to see the Fish and Wildlife Service put forward regulations that fundamentally undercut its own ability to do what’s necessary to save plants and animals from extinction,” said Noah Greenwald, the Center’s endangered species director.

Help our work to restore the Act with a gift to the Center’s Saving Life on Earth Fund.

 
Cartoon showing Coke bottles evolving from glass to plastic

Plastic in Paris: Gold-Medal Greenwashing?

The Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games don’t let spectators bring in single-use plastic bottles — supposedly an effort to cut down on waste and greenhouse gases. But they are letting Coca-Cola, a sponsor and the world’s largest corporate plastic polluter, sell millions of drinks out of such bottles.

The Paris games have been applauded for recognizing the plastic pollution problem but questioned on how they’ve carried it out.

Coke told Politico the best it can do is serve “more than half” its Olympics beverages without single-use plastic. That leaves about 6.4 million drinks served from single-use plastic bottles — or poured from them into “reusable” cups. (Much better optics, right?)

We're pushing Coke to stop its plastic greenwashing across the globe.

Join us: Tell the company to bring back refillable bottles and support plastic-bottle-banning legislation.

 
Mexican wolf looking at the camera behind a chain-link fence

Agencies Must Let Mexican Gray Wolves Live Free

Along with more than 20 other conservation groups, the Center is urging federal and state agencies not to remove a family of endangered Mexican gray wolves from just south of Grand Canyon National Park. The agencies plan to capture the pack and relocate it.

“Wildlife agencies need to halt their plan to move the Kendrick Peak pack and let these wild wolves live in peace and contribute to the natural balance of the Grand Canyon ecosystem,” said the Center’s Michael Robinson.

Please rally for the Kendrick Peak wolves tomorrow at 7 a.m. in Flagstaff before an Arizona Game and Fish Commission meeting that begins at 8. We'll show them that Arizonans want wolves to live unconfined by arbitrary political boundaries. You can also sign up to speak directly to the commission during the public comment session at the start of the meeting. Wolves are counting on you to help them live in peace in the Grand Canyon region.

Rally: Hope for Wolves

Date: Aug. 9

Time to arrive: 7 a.m.

Location: Little America Hotel, 2515 E. Butler Ave., Flagstaff, AZ 86004

 
Horseshoe crab in the sand, seen from above

Good News for Horseshoe Crabs

After years of advocacy by the Center and allies — plus more than 21,000 comments from our supporters — the U.S. Pharmacopeia has announced new national guidance supporting the use of synthetic alternatives to horseshoe crab blood for medical safety testing.

American horseshoe crabs are ancient, body-armored arthropods with 10 eyes and a long, spiked tail. Over the past three decades, populations have plummeted in their largest stronghold, the Delaware Bay. That’s partly due to biomedical companies harvesting them and draining their blue blood, which is used to find toxins in drugs and medical devices. Although Europe has started embracing synthetic alternatives, U.S. companies have been slow to switch.

Now that could change — and you helped. Thank you.

 
Waxy-leaved plant with reddish-orange fruits

The Revelator: Hope Blooms

Could a single Franciscan manzanita plant nicknamed Francie, the last of its kind from the wild, help the whole species make a comeback?

Find out in The Revelator. And if you don’t already, subscribe to the free weekly Revelator e-newsletter for more wildlife and conservation news.

 
Amazing rainbow-colored mantis shrimp underwater on gray sand

That's Wild: How to Get Beat Up by a Shrimp

Striker-type mantis shrimp have an incredible knockout blow. With “raptorial appendages” that can punch the arm right off a crab and vaporize water, these fascinating marine crustaceans — whose eyes are rumored to be able to detect cancer — make one of the fastest biological movements on the planet.

See one in action on YouTube.

 

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Photo credits: Western bumblebee by Stephen Ausmus/USDA ARS, sage grouse courtesy USFWS, Pacific Southwest region; wolverine by wildfaces/Pixabay; Coke bottle graphic courtesy Story of Stuff; Mexican gray wolf courtesy USFWS; horseshoe crab by iloew/Flickr; Franciscan manzanita by Shelley Estelle/Presidio Trust; peacock mantis shrimp by Cédric Péneau/Wikimedia.

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Center for Biological Diversity
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Tucson, AZ 85702
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