From Friends of the Earth <[email protected]>
Subject Don’t let them trophy hunt Yellowstone’s grizzlies
Date September 25, 2020 3:18 PM
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Dear John,

Yellowstone, America’s first National Park, is one of our most beloved national
treasures. Its sweeping grandeur encompasses dramatic canyons, alpine rivers,
lush forests, hot springs, gushing geysers, and an abundance of wildlife. To
many, the most iconic of all Yellowstone’s animals is the mighty grizzly bear.
But today, these bears are under attack. Help save Yellowstone’s grizzly bears -- rush a $10 donation to Friends of the
Earth.
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Grizzlies are an irreplaceable resident of America’s wild places -- integral to
Yellowstone and the surrounding lands for thousands of years. To many, these
mighty mammals represent America’s rugged wilderness, embodied.

A top predator, grizzlies play a pivotal role in keeping our ecosystem healthy
and in balance. Standing up to eight feet tall and weighing in at up to 800
pounds, these intelligent omnivores enhance biodiversity, enrich soils, regulate
prey populations, and transport nutrients through different ecosystems as they
roam far and wide. Scientists are continuously discovering more and more ways
grizzlies play a pivotal role in the ecosystems they inhabit.

Today, faced with shrinking habitat, the loss of critical food sources, and many
impacts of climate change, grizzly bears are struggling to survive. Their
populations outside Alaska have plummeted to a mere 2% of their historic
population, and are restricted to only 1% of their historic range. Fewer and
fewer cubs are surviving to reach adulthood, and adult bears are dying more
quickly because of rapid changes -- from a shifting food supply, to being forced
to hibernate later and later in the fall. Fewer than 2,000 grizzlies remain in
the lower 48 states -- and about 700 of those call the Greater Yellowstone area
home.

This month, Congress is pushing a bill that would remove Greater Yellowstone
Ecosystem grizzly bears, including the grizzlies of Yellowstone and Grand Teton
national parks, from protections under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) -- a
move that threatens decades of progress and puts these animals at risk.

We need to act fast to keep grizzlies protected under the Endangered Species
Act. Donate $10 to Friends of the Earth today.

If you've saved your payment information with ActBlue Express, your donation
will go through immediately:

Donate $10 immediately
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[[link removed]]The new proposed bill to delist Yellowstone’s grizzlies threatens the tenuous
recovery of these bears, and goes against everything we believe in. If passed,
the move would allow Yellowstone’s endangered grizzlies to be killed by trophy
hunters. It would also strip away many other key protections for this bear, and
open their habitats up to destruction from extractive industries.

They’ve tried this before: In 2007, the bears were delisted, but were placed
back on the Endangered Species List in 2009. In 2017, The Department of Interior
illegally delisted Yellowstone’s grizzlies to allow for trophy hunts.
Fortunately that decision was overturned, and we’ve been fighting to keep it
that way -- but today, Yellowstone’s grizzlies are in the crosshairs once again.

We can’t let Congress delist Yellowstone’s iconic grizzlies. Support Friends of
the Earth with a $10 donation today.

If you've saved your payment information with ActBlue Express, your donation
will go through immediately:

Donate $10 immediately
[[link removed]] Donate $5/month immediately
[[link removed]]This bill is part of a larger, carefully coordinated attack on the Endangered
Species Act and public lands, spearheaded by oil, logging and mining companies.
It’s no secret: Their plan is to permanently open our public lands for drilling,
logging, and mining that would destroy already fragile wildlife habitats without
repercussion.

Endangered Species laws provide critical and needed protection for America’s
iconic animal species. They are also some of our most effective safeguards in
the fight to protect our public lands and curb catastrophic climate change.

Climate change is already pushing multiple species, from corals to bears, to the
brink of extinction. For the sake of our wildlife, for the sake of our planet,
we can’t let oil, logging, and mining companies and their cronies in Congress
destroy our public lands and wipe out our endangered species.

Friends of the Earth is built to fight back in moments like these -- and thanks
to support from members like you, we continue to win critical protections for
our public lands and wildlife.

* We ousted Scott Pruitt and Ryan Zinke, the corrupt officials who were selling
off our public lands.
* We are leading the charge in opposing oil and gas lease sales on public
lands, and delivering hundreds of thousands of comments to pressure
decision-makers.
* We are working with Congress to pass bills to safeguard America’s special
places and the species that live on them.

At Friends of the Earth, we are using every tool available to protect endangered
species -- not destructive industries' profits. We know how to fight and win,
and that’s exactly what we plan to do. Today, we are asking you to stand with us
as we continue this work -- together.

Help save endangered species like Yellowstone’s grizzly bears.

If you've saved your payment information with ActBlue Express, your donation
will go through immediately:

Donate $10 immediately
[[link removed]] Donate $5/month immediately
[[link removed]]Thank you,
Ariel Moger,
Legislative and political coordinator,
Friends of the Earth

Contact Us:Friends of the Earth U.S.

Washington, D.C. | Berkeley, CA

1-877-843-8687

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