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Tagged : endangered-species


Nature in Danger: The African Elephant

June 18th, 2013

African elephants are listed as “vulnerable” because they are losing habitat and remain a target for ivory poachers. But these intelligent, iconic animals are getting some help, as the world recognizes they shouldn’t be killed for their tusks.

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U.S. gray wolves headed for disaster in 2013?

June 6th, 2013

Two years of sport hunting have taken a toll on the gray wolves in the U.S. Northern Rocky Mountains. Their population is down by 34 percent after what one biologist satirically calls a “robust” hunting season.

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Nature in Danger: Orangutans are gentle apes facing extreme threats

February 22nd, 2013

Bornean and Sumatran orangutans face a lethal cocktail of threats that could drive them to extinction: Habitat loss caused by forest-clearing paper and palm companies; potential kidnapping by poachers in the exotic pet trade; and isolation. But you can help.

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Nature in Danger: The Red Wolf

July 23rd, 2012

Red wolves, commonly mistaken as coyotes, have stunning copper and gray coats. They live in packs composed of one alpha male and one female, along with their litter. When their pups are age 2, the males begin the search for another female to start their own packs, and their parents continue having litters once a year.

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Ranchers’ attitudes vary toward programs designed to protect endangered species, report says

April 2nd, 2012

Wildlife does not respect property boundaries. Therefore, protecting endangered species cannot be accomplished on government-owned lands alone. The cooperation and assistance of private landowners is essential. However, some landowners see government biodiversity programs, such as the Endangered Species Act, as a threat to independent management of their property.

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Snow leopard and cub photographed in Afghanistan

January 3rd, 2012

The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) has released a rare photograph of a Snow Leopard and cub, taken in Afghanistan this fall.

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Earth to pass 7 billion mark, start the conversation with a condom

October 20th, 2011

The Center for Biological Diversity has stepped up its condom giveaway campaign in anticipation of the world passing the 7 billion benchmark.
The campaign, which wraps free condoms inside a package featuring an endangered animal is both edgy and cute at the same time. You could even say it’s over the top, but we’re trying to keep the puns to a minimum.

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Scientists say wildlife should be rescued from politics

October 3rd, 2011

When a species recovers enough to be removed from the federal endangered species list, the public trust doctrine – the principle that government must conserve natural resources for the public good – should guide state management of wildlife, scientists say.

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Owl presence may halt Oregon timber sale

October 20th, 2010

The discovery of a pair of federally-protected northern spotted owls in the Willamette National Forest may derail plans to harvest 157 acres of mature and old-growth forest above the McKenzie River.

A legal challenge by two conservation organizations – Cascadia Wildlands and Oregon Wild – is based on new research showing that the owls have taken up residence in the neighborhood of the planned timber sale. The groups claim that the U.S. Forest Service has ignored new information about the owls that has surfaced since the agency agreed to log the area in 2003.

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Disappearance of Inyo chipmunk a sign of change in the Sierra Nevada

October 6th, 2010

The Inyo chipmunk lives in the alpine regions of the Sierra Nevada mountains. (Photo: Center for Biological Diversity).


Chalk up yet another potential furry victim of climate change: The Inyo chipmunk. Once a regular in California’s Sierra Nevada, the brown-eyed, orange/black-tailed creature is nowhere to be seen these days.

“We have not been able to find it anywhere,” James Patton, a retired UC Berkeley professor of zoology who has spent the last two years in search of the species, told the Sacramento Bee.

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Managed relocation: An answer for endangered species?

October 5th, 2010

From Green Right Now Reports

What to do if a species seems doomed to extinction in the face of climate change? How about an assisted change of scenery?

In the Oct. 1 issue of the journal Ecological Applications, Arizona State environmental ethicist Ben Minteer and ecologist James P. Collins take a look at Managed Relocation, otherwise known as Assisted Colonization, Assisted Migration and Assisted Translocation.

Whatever you call it, the process involves the physical relocation of endangered or threatened species of plants and animals, by humans, to new geographical locations.

“New approaches to conservation, such as MR mean the need for a new ‘ecological ethics’ geared toward problem-solving in ecological research and policy,” says Minteer. “Beyond asking ‘should’ we do it, there’s the more pragmatic ethical question: what separates a ‘good’ from a ‘bad’ MR activity?”

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Be part of the solution: Do your share to preserve Earth’s ecosystems

April 22nd, 2010

Lemurs, a threatened species (Photo: Osoman/Dreamstime)

Lemurs, a threatened species (Photo: Orsoman/Dreamstime)

They are slipping through our fingers. Our tenuous hold on the Earth’s threatened animals, plants and fish, rivers and oceans, forests and ice caps is not strong enough. It’s not for lack of trying — environmental and eco-conscious groups are in a constant scramble to slow the lengthening list of losses.

Every year, more than 2 million acres of Amazon rainforest – called “the lungs of our planet” for its massive daily recycling of carbon dioxide into oxygen – is lost to logging, agriculture, roads and more.

At last count, out of 44,837 known species of living creatures on Earth, nearly 40 percent are threatened and 804 are extinct.

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