Ask the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to vote for increased species protections!

Dear NRDC Activist,

Over the past week, my NRDC colleagues and I have been on the ground in Geneva at the World Wildlife Conference — also known as CITES COP18 — advocating for increased protections for some of our planet's most endangered wildlife.

And we have great news: The CITES Parties placed strict trade limits on giraffes, recognizing that uncontrolled trade could threaten giraffe survival! This is a positive step for giraffes, but there are other species that need increased protections.

These imperiled species face extinction head-on due to irresponsible trade, trafficking, and trophy hunting, and it is here that we can demand the support they desperately need.

And while we've been here making the case for these protections, tens of thousands of activists like you have sent messages urging delegates from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service here at CITES to vote to save these magnificent creatures.

The outcome of a vote on these proposals will either help these imperiled species or contribute to their doom, and your message can be a deciding factor. Please, send a message to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service urging them to push for increased protections for some of our most at-risk species at CITES.

Thank you for doing your part in this fight.

P.S. Read our blog on the perils of wildlife trade and how it's a leading cause of the planet's accelerating biodiversity crisis.

Dear NRDC Activist,

President Trump moved to dramatically weaken the Endangered Species Act this week — yet another threat to the one million species already facing extinction.

Populations of some of our planet's most threatened and endangered species are continuing to plummet — due in large part to demand for animal products and hunting trophies in the U.S. and around the world.

Thankfully, we have a chance to help save these animals — and here's how:

Right now, more than 3,000 world leaders and representatives from 183 countries — including the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) — are meeting in Geneva, Switzerland for the World Wildlife Conference, also called the 18th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora (CITES).

Their agenda: how best to ensure that international trade in wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival.

And now that Trump has moved to eviscerate the Endangered Species Act, we need to push harder to protect wildlife in other venues, like the World Wildlife Conference.

So please send a message to Fish and Wildlife urging them to increase protections for our most at-risk species.

We are focusing our attention on seven species in particular at this conference, where global leaders discuss and vote on proposals that will either help them, or contribute to their decline:

Giraffes

Giraffes have plummeted by an alarming 40% over the last 30 years and are facing a "quiet extinction." We're fighting in court to protect giraffes in the U.S. — now we need global leaders to protect giraffes from international trade in their parts. Make your voice heard for giraffe survival at CITES >>

Rhinos

Rhinos are under severe pressure from poaching and illegal trade, and by most estimates, black rhinos are only a decade away from extinction. Urge the FWS to help save rhinos at CITES >>

Elephants

African elephants are threatened by poachers who slaughter these majestic animals for their ivory tusks. They're also targeted by trophy hunters who shoot them merely for bragging rights. This must stop — help increase protections for African elephants at CITES >>

Otters

Recent investigations have shown that populations of two rare otter species have drastically declined largely because of global trade. Help us fight to ban all international commercial trade for these two species of otters at CITES >>

Sharks

Sharks are crucial to ocean health, but today many are in steep decline and/or highly depleted due to illegal overfishing. With roughly a quarter of sharks at risk of extinction, we need strong safeguards that will help to combat shark overfishing and end illegal trade in shark fins: Send your urgent message now >>

Vaquitas

There are only 10 of the critically endangered vaquita porpoise left on the planet. Why? Because vaquitas become entangled and drown in gillnets that are used to illegally catch other fish. Help ensure the FWS votes to protect this near-extinct species >>

We do whatever it takes to defend threatened and endangered wildlife at home, and now we have a chance to provide protections to species abroad. But we need your help to do it: Send a message to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service urging them to vote for increased protections for endangered species at CITES.

Thank you for all that you do.

Sincerely,

Zak Smith
Director, International Wildlife Conservation Initiative, NRDC

Photo credit from top to bottom, iStock, iStock, Dr. Nicole Duplaix, Deposit Photos, Nature Picture Library via Alamy, Thomas A. Jefferson


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