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Friday, April 15, 2022
Fighting for the Southwest’s Unique Wolves
New Plan Aims to Reduce Mexican Gray Wolf Killings
Responding to a legal win by the Center for Biological Diversity and allies, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service released a draft revision today of its 2017 Mexican Wolf Recovery Plan, intended to provide new measures to reduce wolf deaths caused by people.
From 1998 — when Mexican gray wolves were first reintroduced to the wild after years of Center advocacy to make that happen — through 2020, 119 wolves were confirmed killed illegally. Dozens more radio-collared wolves disappeared suspiciously. Last year 25 wolves died, and in most cases the causes of their deaths were not disclosed.
“We’ll be pushing for improvements in the final plan,” said Center wolf expert Michael Robinson. “We’re pleased by added measures to help wolves cross roads but more efforts are needed to stop poaching by wolf-hating ranchers.”
What can people learn from birds? Only one of the most important facts of life — that humans and nature are intimately linked.
Learn what that means from renowned birders and authors J. Drew Lanham and David Lindo in a special Earth Week webinar cohosted by the Center for Biological Diversity, Thoreau Society, and College of Idaho. These world-famous birders will share what birds can teach us about interconnectivity, following up with a Q & A session for participants.
Register to join us on Wednesday, April 20, at 2 p.m. PST/5 p.m. EST.
The Center and allies have filed suit to stop the Mendocino Redwood Company from logging nearly 1,000 acres of beautiful redwood forest in a California watershed that’s home to threatened northern spotted owls. Besides ignoring state protections for the owls, the logging project could violate a voter-approved ordinance meant to reduce fire danger.
“The last thing we should be doing in the midst of a climate emergency and an extinction crisis is whacking down magnificent old redwoods, killing tanoak evergreen trees, and jeopardizing the coastal redwood ecosystem,” said Justin Augustine, a Center attorney.
Win for Arizona’s San Francisco River
In a lifesaving victory for imperiled Mexican garter snakes, southwestern willow flycatchers, loach minnows and other rare wildlife, a plan to build a 200-foot-tall dam along a remote stretch of river at the Arizona-New Mexico border has just been deep-sixed.
“It’s a good day for the spectacular cradle of biodiversity that is the San Francisco River,” said the Center’s Taylor McKinnon. “This project faced a hellish legal fight and never should’ve seen the light of day. The San Francisco needs permanent federal protection.”
Along with destroying vital habitat, the dam project would have industrialized national forest roadless areas, wilderness study areas, and precious river reaches.
Protection Sought for Railroad Valley Toads
Entirely dependent on rare desert springs for their survival, little amphibians called Railroad Valley toads are now threatened by a lithium project that could suck up billions of gallons of groundwater every year.
These warty, white-bellied toads live in only one tiny, isolated area in Nevada — less than 450 acres. So on Tuesday the Center petitioned to protect them under the Endangered Species Act.
“Amphibians are more imperiled than any other group of vertebrates,” said Krista Kemppinen, a senior Center scientist. “Lithium’s an important part of the transition to renewable energy, but it can’t come with a price tag of extinction.”
Suit Pushes for Better Air Pollution Rules
The Center and allies just sued the Environmental Protection Agency over its ancient, inadequate rules limiting soot, sulfur and nitrogen air pollution. The Clean Air Act requires the EPA to update the standards every five years — but the agency hasn’t touched them for a decade.
Besides hurting people who breathe these pollutants, they also harm crops, soils, vegetation, the climate, and wildlife like endangered whooping cranes.
“Since the EPA’s last review, the science behind these pollutants’ harm has become more certain,” said Center attorney Robert Ukeiley. “But the new science can’t help protect people and the planet until the EPA follows the law.”
UN Climate Report: We Have the Tools; Use Them
The United Nations’ latest climate report says we already have the technological tools to avoid total catastrophe. All we have to do is use them — now.
“We urgently need to leave fossil fuels in the ground, advance renewable energy, and invest in nature-based carbon dioxide removal through forest and ecosystem protection,” said the Center’s Maya Golden-Krasner. “We have the solutions. The only question is whether our leaders have the courage.”
This Los Angeles Times editorial discusses actions — championed by the Center — that the U.S. president and Congress can take immediately, including using the Defense Production Act to speed up the production and deployment of clean-energy technology.
Revelator: The Best Pandemic-Prevention Tactics
If we want to stop pandemics at the source, the international community must agree to end deforestation, close live-wildlife markets, and embrace a treaty to prevent future outbreaks.
That’s Wild: Javelina Chasing Cheetos Gets Trapped in Car
Meanwhile, in Arizona … last week a javelina made a late-night snack run into a Subaru hatchback someone had left open. Inside the car the wild peccary — a New World ungulate that looks a bit like a wild boar — tore into a bag of Cheetos as the hatch closed behind him.
According to the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office, the javelina licked "the Cheeto bag crumb-less" and somehow knocked the car into neutral, causing it to roll down the owner’s driveway and across the street. Luckily no one was injured, and the javelina was released without further incident.
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