Center for Biological Diversity
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Endangered Earth
No. 1251, June 27, 2024
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Save the Gulf From Another Oil Spill
In 2010 the BP Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded, killing 11 people and spewing about 200 million gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico. Thousands of animals — from seabirds and sea turtles to marine mammals — were injured or killed.
Now BP is back. Reports indicate it wants to drill and frack in even deeper Gulf waters, where oil is under extreme pressure. Reaching that oil will be risky and test the limits of drilling technology. It will also threaten key habitat for critically endangered Rice's whales, who were seriously hurt by the 2010 spill. With only around 50 left, another disastrous oil spill could drive these whales extinct.
Oil and gas development in the Gulf has caused spill after spill. It hurts people and wildlife directly and perpetuates the use of climate-killing fossil fuels. Thankfully federal law gives the U.S. Department of the Interior the authority to reject plans — like this one — that risk serious, unacceptable harm to the environment.
Take action: Tell Interior Secretary Deb Haaland to reject BP's disastrous new drilling plan.
Pup Born to Colorado’s Newly Released Wolves
It’s official: Colorado wildlife managers have confirmed that a pair of Colorado’s newly reintroduced wolves have had a pup. The new wolf family has been named the Copper Creek Pack.
“It’s so exciting to be witnessing the early days of wolves’ return to Colorado,” said the Center for Biological Diversity’s Alli Henderson. “With wolf families gone from Colorado for nearly a century, this pup’s arrival is a huge conservation milestone. Wolves belong here, and I’m so glad they’re back.”
Check out a video of wolves being released into the Colorado wild on Instagram or YouTube.
And help the Center’s work for wolves in Colorado and beyond with a gift to our Saving Life on Earth Fund .
Lawsuit Launched to Protect Red Tree Voles
The Center and allies just filed a notice of intent to sue the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for denying Endangered Species Act protection to the imperiled North Oregon Coast population of red tree voles.
Threatened by logging and climate change-fueled wildfires in the Pacific Northwest, these tiny "tree hamsters" (not really hamsters, of course) spend almost their whole lives in treetops eating conifer needles. Most animals find pine needles gross, but clever tree voles know just how to remove the nasty bits.
The Center has been fighting for North Oregon Coast red tree voles since our 2007 petition, and we’re not giving up now.
Saving a Zoological Oasis in Arizona’s Chiricahuas
The Center and allies just petitioned the U.S. Forest Service to give special protection to a beautiful 5,500-acre swath of the western Chiricahua Mountains in southeastern Arizona. The agency has the power to safeguard a beautiful canyon and its perennial waters as a “zoological-botanical area.” If our petition is granted, it will offer protection from road construction, motorized recreation, and new mining.
The canyon’s wildlife ranges from coatimundis to jaguars to elegant trogons. Its agaves, grasses, forbs, oaks, and other plants are of cultural importance to the region’s Apache and Tohono O’odham peoples.
“This stunning area is threatened by a proposal to open a road right through the canyon’s heart,” said the Center’s Laiken Jordahl.
Stay In the Know With Texts From the Center
Life on Earth is threatened by an extinction crisis and climate emergency — but it’s not too late. In 30 years the Center has protected more than 750 species and half a billion acres of habitat.
We need your help to keep the success going, and we want to make it easy for you. Sign up to get texts on the most urgent Center issues (four to six messages per month), and you’ll be the first to know about breaking news and actions you can take to make a difference. You can unsubscribe anytime, and we won’t share your number.
Change is a text away.
Revelator: Summer Reads on Wildlife and More
Lost birds, climate anxiety, extinction: just a few of the subjects covered in a list of new environmental books recommended by The Revelator .
They include a memoir by Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant, a primer on dealing with disinformation by Lee McIntire, and a graphic novel starring a California mountain lion by artist Meital Smith and the Center’s own Tiffany Yap.
Read about all these reads in The Revelator . And if you don’t already, subscribe to the free weekly Revelator e-newsletter for more wildlife and conservation news.
That’s Wild: Sounds of the Underground
More than half the species on Earth live in the soil, yet that subterranean world is scarcely known to us. Now UK scientists are listening to the doings of creatures beneath the surface, from earthworms to voles, and sampling the soil audioscapes of different sites around the globe under different conditions.
So far much of what they’re hearing remains a mystery. But it’s very cool to hear — listen for yourself.
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