On average, 25 humpbacks are entangled annually off the U.S. West Coast. The sablefish industry in particular — which uses 2-mile-long strings of 30 to 50 pots — kills or seriously injures at least one humpback every year as they migrate along the West Coast. And the problem is only going to get worse as climate change alters migration patterns, making it harder for whales to avoid fishing gear.
To make all fishing safer, the Center is calling on the federal government to require all pot-gear fisheries to convert to ropeless gear within the next five years.
On the heels of the toxic railway accident in East Palestine, Ohio, developers are moving ahead with the Uinta Basin Railway, which will send polluting trains hauling millions of barrels of oil from Utah to the Houston area for refining. The project will worsen climate pollution, harm human health with toxic pollution, threaten lands and water with oil spills, and degrade habitat for wildlife like imperiled greater sage grouse. The project will allow Utah drillers to increase oil production by up to 350,000 barrels per day — almost twice as much as the just-approved Willow project in Alaska.
To finance this disaster, developers want federal approval to issue $2 billion in tax-exempt bonds, which would result in a huge loss to taxpayers while saving the company up to $80 million annually for decades.
The planet is facing an unprecedented extinction crisis, with 28% of plants and animals at risk. After the Center pushed for bold, urgent action to save them all, from elephants to sea cucumbers, leaders at the latest UN Convention on Biological Diversity, aka COP15, agreed to protect one-third of the globe by 2030 — but they didn’t set a goal to halt human-caused extinctions.
A low-growing herb that favors sandy washes and dunes, the white-margined penstemon has tube-shaped pink flowers and broad green leaves outlined in white. It’s down to just four populations in the Mojave Desert, all threatened by a long list of dangers.
“The white-margined penstemon is facing death by a thousand cuts,” said the Center’s Patrick Donnelly. “The global extinction crisis is happening right here in the Mojave Desert, and today we’re fighting back on behalf of this special little flower.”
Revelator: Beavers, Birds, Bats and Butterflies
New research just gave us another reason to love beavers: These busy ecosystem engineers boost biodiversity. Their tree-clearing and dam-building ways create wetlands, increase soil moisture, and let more light reach the ground. All that drives the growth of shrubby vegetation, whose flowers draw butterflies, while beaver ponds attract bug buffets for bats.
The Center and partners released a new report on the huge potential benefits of the nation’s largest public power utility, the Tennessee Valley Authority, transitioning to 100% clean energy by 2035.
TVA’s Clean Energy Future outlines how the agency — which provides electricity for more than 10 million customers in seven states — can start retiring its fossil fuel plants now, reliably and affordably replacing them with renewable energy. That could create 15,600 new jobs a year, reduce the percentage of household income spent on energy, and generate nearly $27 billion in public health benefits.
Life advice from bobcats: If you want to ask someone on a date, communication is key. Head-bobbing yowls, rapid tail-twitching, and awkward pauses are sure to help you successfully court your sweetie.
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Photo credits: Humpback whale by Elianna Dipp/Pexels; East Palestine, Ohio train derailment courtesy NTSB; round hickorynut and longsolid mussels courtesy USFWS, bog buck moths by Barb Sendelbach/Flickr; African elephant by Brett Hartl/Center for Biological Diversity; white-margined penstemons by Patrick Donnelly/Center for Biological Diversity; Eurasian beaver by Per Harald Olsen/NTNU; TVA rally courtesy Tennessee Valley Energy Democracy Movement; bobcat video by Robyn Sloan.
Center for Biological Diversity P.O. Box 710 Tucson, AZ 85702 United States
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