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No. 1,347, April 30, 2026 |
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Speak Out to Protect Whales From Ship Strikes |
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Northwest Wolf Counts Are Up — but So Are Deaths |
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Mussel Habitat Protected Across 17 States |
Following our litigation the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has just protected 3,814 river miles for four species of freshwater mussels in states from Minnesota to New York and Alabama to Virginia. The colorfully named mussels — snuffbox, spectaclecase, sheepnose, and rayed bean — need clean, flowing rivers to survive. “I’m thrilled that these mussels and their rivers are getting protection,” said Noah Greenwald, endangered species codirector at the Center. “Mussels are the unsung heroes of clean water, who tirelessly filter millions of gallons every day.” The eastern United States has more freshwater mussel species than anywhere in the world but has already lost more than 23 to pollution, dams, and development. |
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In Court to Challenge a Big Bend Border Wall |
The Center and allies just sued the Department of Homeland Security for waiving dozens of laws — without congressional approval — to fast-track border-wall construction through Texas’ Big Bend region. A wall would sever public access to the Rio Grande and split populations of wildlife like black bears, bighorns, and Carmen Mountains white-tailed deer, leaving them isolated and vulnerable to decline. “The department has unconstitutionally gutted our nation’s bedrock environmental laws to build a wildlife-killing wall that would permanently lock away the Rio Grande,” said the Center’s Laiken Jordahl. “They’re trying to gouge a wound that will never heal into one of America’s most beautiful wild places.” |
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Revelator: Can Animals Get PTSD? |
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Suing to Help Salamander Mussels, Clear Lake Hitch |
This week the Center sued over two water-dwelling species, a mussel and a fish, whose protection the Trump administration has failed to act on over the past year. Salamander mussels live in the Great Lakes, the Midwest, and Appalachia and got their name from the mudpuppy salamanders who host their larvae; they’re the only known mussel to use a host that’s not a fish to facilitate their reproduction. Clear Lake hitch live only in Lake County, California, and have traditionally been a staple food and cultural touchstone for the region’s Pomo people, who call them “chi.” In 2025 the Trump administration chose not to protect even a single species under the Endangered Species Act — the first year no animal or plant has been newly listed since 1981. |
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That's Wild: Human Necropolis, Bee Megalopolis |
A new study in the journal Apidologie has found one of the largest-known U.S. clusters of ground-nesting bees beneath a cemetery in Ithaca, New York — about 5.6 million. Researchers from Cornell University conducted the study in 2023, when they collected a number of Andrena regularis bees from the graveyard area and extrapolated based on the data. About 98% of bee species in the United States are what’s called “solitary” bees, meaning they don’t live in hives. Solitary bees like A. regularis don’t get enough attention, said one of the scientists; the study points to the importance of cemeteries as habitat for them. |
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Center for Biological Diversity | Saving Life on Earth
Donate now to support the Center's work. Photo credits: Gray whales courtesy NOAA Fisheries; wolf courtesy Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife; snuffbox mussel by Dick Biggins/USFWS; bighorn sheep by Ryan Hagerty/USFWS, black bear cub by Courtney Celley/USFWS, white-tailed deer by Liz Julian/USFWS; art by John Platt/The Revelator; Clear Lake hitch by Natoma Gardner/Wikimedia Commons; Andrena regularis by Allan Smith-Pardo/Bees of the United States USDA APHIS PPQ. View our privacy policy. |
Center for Biological Diversity P.O. Box 710 Tucson, AZ 85702 United States 0-0-0-0 |
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