Beloved Mountain Lion Dies After Collision |
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Tell Tennessee Valley Authority: Pass on Dirty Gas |
Gas prices are spiking, and so are electricity bills. That could saddle millions of people with utility debt and risk shutoffs this winter. But rather than investing in cheaper and safer rooftop-solar energy, utilities like the Tennessee Valley Authority keep pumping money into new fossil fuel projects.
This massive utility is proposing to replace its Cumberland coal power plant with a new fossil gas plant and pipeline. As the largest public power provider in the United States, TVA should be leading the desperately needed transition to a cleaner renewable energy future — not standing in its way.
Urge the utility’s president and CEO to stop defying climate science and follow President Biden’s mandate for 100% clean energy.
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New Protection for Three Plants
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After years of Center legal work, on Friday Tiehm’s buckwheat won final protection as an endangered species. This rare Nevada wildflower is threatened by a lithium mine for which the federal government just launched an approval process — so protection is more crucial than ever. Tiehm’s lives on just 10 acres of Nevada public land, and the proposed mine would destroy nearly all its habitat.
On the very same day, following work by the Center and allies, a high-elevation tree called whitebark pine won protection as threatened. A keystone food source for grizzlies and other animals, it’s imperiled by disease and climate change.
Then, this Wednesday, the endangered Florida bristle fern got 4,195 acres of protected critical habitat. Acutely threatened by development-driven habitat loss and by sea-level rise, the dainty fern has no roots and grows in moist, shady areas of exposed limestone in Miami-Dade and Sumter counties. Only six known populations remain.
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| Biodiversity Convention Agrees to 30x30 Plan |
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Victory Against Junk Wall on the Border |
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Right Whales Condemned to Extinction
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With no public discussion or accountability, Sen. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Appropriations Committee Chair Patrick Leahy inserted an unprecedented provision into the massive bill to fund the federal government, which passed the Senate Thursday morning. This policy would let the U.S. lobster industry delay — for six years — actions that are urgently needed to save critically endangered North Atlantic right whales from fatal fishing-gear entanglement.
Without more simple actions like limiting vertical fishing lines and seasonal zone restrictions, these majestic creatures will almost certainly disappear. There are only 340 of them left on the planet. “Extinction is a political choice, and Schumer just made it clear that he’s willing to pander to special interests over protecting these mighty giants,” said the Center's Stephanie Kurose. |
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Help Stop This Dangerous Climate Bomb
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Revelator: Good News for Bears, Birds and More |
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Awards Go to Environmental Heroes |
The Center has just announced the winners of our 2022 Rose Braz and E.O. Wilson awards.
The Rose Braz Award for Bold Activism — given in memory of the Center’s beloved founding climate campaign director — goes to Ukrainian climate scientist Svitlana Romanko and, posthumously, to water protector Joye Braun. Romanko founded Razom We Stand after the Russian invasion of Ukraine and is a powerful voice calling on world leaders to break away from their fossil fuel dependence on Russia. Braun, who died in November at 53, cofounded the Oceti Sakowin camp at Standing Rock, sparking momentum to stop the Dakota Access pipeline, and helped lead in the People vs. Fossil Fuels movement.
The E.O Wilson Award, named for the renowned scientist, goes to iconic researcher Jim Williams, a champion of U.S. Southeast endangered species conservation. As a biologist in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Williams wrote many of the earliest Endangered Species Act listing decisions for freshwater mussels and fishes — including snail darters, declared recovered earlier this year. Now retired, Williams continues his advocacy.
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That’s Wild: Celebrating the Snake Clitoris |
Seduction and stimulation are part of sex life for a lot of animals. And with a recent discovery of clitorises in snakes, scientists may add some new ones to the list.
Megan Folwell, lead researcher in a recent study on snake sex, shocked the science world with what should have been unsurprising news. She says the clitoris wasn’t hard to find — researchers just weren’t looking for it, focusing more on snake penises.
Folwell first located a clitoris on a highly venomous common death adder, who she noticed having a heart-shaped tissue structure near the scent glands. Folwell’s team went on to confirm this anatomy in nine other snake species.
The finding sheds new light on mating behaviors that could be considered foreplay, where a male snake wraps around his partner’s tail and pulses near the clitoris. |
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Center for Biological Diversity P.O. Box 710 Tucson, AZ 85702 United States |
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