If just a few more people from If just a few more people from your state pitch in we can hit our goal. pitch in we can hit our goal.
Friend, our Spring Wildlife Drive ends tomorrow – and we still need 82 more supporters like you to pitch in to reach our 250 donor goal! Every dollar will strengthen our work to protect grizzly bears, gray wolves, manatees, whales, and other threatened and endangered species.
Campaign Goal: 250 donors to help wild animals Campaign Deadline: March 14, 2024 Progress to Goal: 168 donors have contributed Your Name: Supporter Spring Wildlife Drive Donor?PENDING Suggested Contribution:$15 to become a Sierra Club member
Your contribution to the Spring Wildlife Drive will make a life-saving impact for some of our most vulnerable wild species, including:
Florida manatees. These beloved sea mammals starve to death when sewage and fertilizer pollution destroy the seagrass they depend on for nourishment, making supplemental feeding necessary. Congressional attempts to undermine the Endangered Species Act could be disastrous for manatees if they succeed in cutting funds and slashing critical protections at the very moment when the species is being pushed closer and closer to the edge of extinction. We need you to stand with us against these anti-wildlife attacks before it's too late.
Rice's whales. A planned oil export facility off the coast of Texas could be a death sentence for these gentle whales, which are one of the most critically endangered animals on the planet. With fewer than 50 Rice's whales remaining in the Gulf of Mexico, the actions we take today will determine whether the species survives for future generations. The Sierra Club is working in court to block the export facility and fighting to limit vessel speeds in the Gulf, but we need your support before it's too late to save these rare whales.
Photo by Sam Farkas, NOAA OAR Photo Contest 2014 (CC BY 2.0)
Gray wolves. The US Fish and Wildlife Service dealt a major blow to the survival of gray wolves last month when it rejected a petition to restore federal protections for the species in the Northern Rockies. Meanwhile, anti-wildlife members of Congress are trying to push through legislation that would remove more wolves from the endangered species list and undermine critical safeguards for other threatened wildlife. We've rescued gray wolves from the brink of extinction before, and we can do it again – but we need your support.