John,

The American bumblebee is racing against the clock to avoid extinction.

Its population has plummeted by 90% in just the last 20 years.1 Will these bumblebees be able to slow their decline and begin to recover? Or will they continue their freefall until there are none left?

That could be up to the Fish and Wildlife Service. By listing the American bumblebee as endangered, the agency can help create safe havens for these bumblebees and give them the protection they need to begin to thrive again.

Tell the Fish and Wildlife Service to protect the American bumblebee today.

Thank you,

Ellen Montgomery

1. Elizabeth Gamillo, "The American Bumblebee Has Nearly Vanished From Eight States," Smithsonian Magazine, October 6, 2021.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Environment Colorado <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Apr 14, 2023
Subject: Add your name: It's time to list the American bumblebee as endangered
To: John xxxxxx <[email protected]>

Environment Colorado Banner

Save the American bumblebee. Add your name

John,

American bumblebees once lazily buzzed over backyards, fields and meadows across our country.

Today, the species has vanished from eight states, and it's teetering on the brink of extinction. The American bumblebee population has plummeted by 90% since the year 2000 due to the same factors that affect all precious pollinators: the widespread use of bee-killing pesticides, habitat loss and climate change.1

It's not too late to save the American bumblebee -- but we need to act fast.

Tell the Fish and Wildlife Service to protect the American bumblebee under the Endangered Species Act today.

Eight states -- Idaho, Maine, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Wyoming -- have already lost the American bumblebee entirely. The species has declined by 99% in New York and by more than 50% in the Midwest and the Southeast. And yet, the American bumblebee is not protected as an endangered species.2

The Endangered Species Act can change that. It's our best tool to prevent extinction, with a 90% success rate.3 This is the law that saved the bald eagle and the American crocodile -- and now it can do the same for the American bumblebee.

By listing this fuzzy flier as endangered, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service would be required to create a recovery plan -- helping to create safe havens for these bumblebees and give them the monitoring and protection they need to begin to thrive again.

In September 2021, the agency found that endangered species protections may be warranted for the bee. While that's a good start, nothing has happened in the year and a half since.

We need urgent and quick action to save American bumblebees now, before we lose them forever.

Add your name: Protect the American bumblebee today.

Over the past few years, our staff and supporters across the country have helped win commitments from home improvement stores to stop selling plants with bee-killing neonic pesticides, and our national network has won laws in several states banning some of these pesticides' worst uses. We've even won new protections for bees on land owned by the Department of Defense.

But bees still need our help. The rusty patched bumblebee and Franklin's bumblebee have both been granted endangered species protections. Now it's time to do the same for the American bumblebee -- before it's too late.

Stand up for the American bumblebee today.

Thank you,

Ellen Montgomery

1. Elizabeth Gamillo, "The American Bumblebee Has Nearly Vanished From Eight States," Smithsonian Magazine, October 6, 2021.
2. Elizabeth Gamillo, "The American Bumblebee Has Nearly Vanished From Eight States," Smithsonian Magazine, October 6, 2021.
3. Roddy Scheer and Doug Moss, "Is the Endangered Species Act a Success or Failure?," Scientific American, August 9, 2012.


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