Endangered Species Coalition https://www.endangered.org/ Fri, 29 Aug 2025 12:46:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://www.endangered.org/assets/uploads/2020/05/cropped-RS119_ESC-LOGO-FINAL-1-32x32.png Endangered Species Coalition https://www.endangered.org/ 32 32 From Farmland to Pollinator Haven: How Horn Farm Center and the Endangered Species Coalition Are Growing Hope for Bees and Butterflies https://www.endangered.org/from-farmland-to-pollinator-haven-horn-farm/ Fri, 22 Aug 2025 14:05:44 +0000 https://www.endangered.org/?p=36214 Discover how the Horn Farm Center is restoring farmland into thriving pollinator habitat, protecting bees, monarchs, and butterflies.

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A few miles outside of York, Pennsylvania, sits the Horn Farm Center. Over twenty years ago, the community rallied together to protect the farmland from industrial development and establish it as a place of agricultural education. Today, Horn Farm Center stewards the land and is an innovative leader in organic and regenerative farming practices.

 

Since 2022, Endangered Species Coalition has supported Horn Farm Center’s Ecological Gardener Training Program, providing funds for native plant material to be planted by program participants in demonstration plantings. This funding came from ESC’s Pollinator Protectors campaign, an initiative to install native habitat for pollinators nationally.

In the demonstration plantings at Horn Farm Center, the mountain mint (Pycnanthemum virginianum) was abuzz with several native bee species. Monarch butterflies, an iconic species currently under review for Endangered Species Act protections, sipped from the purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) blooms. Because the farming and landscaping practices are non-toxic, meaning no pesticides or herbicides are applied to plants, pollinators can safely thrive as a result of these native plantings.

Learn more about the Pollinator Protectors campaign here

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Trump Administration Declares a War on Wildlife with Nomination of Brian Nesvik https://www.endangered.org/trump-administration-declares-a-war-on-wildlife-with-nomination-of-nesvik/ Tue, 05 Aug 2025 17:01:01 +0000 https://www.endangered.org/?p=35480 Last week, the Senate confirmed Brian Nesvik as Director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. While his appointment was endorsed by some within the traditional wildlife community, the Endangered Species Coalition and numerous conservation partners strongly opposed his confirmation…

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Last week, the Senate confirmed Brian Nesvik as Director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. While his appointment was endorsed by some within the traditional wildlife community, the Endangered Species Coalition and numerous conservation partners strongly opposed his confirmation based on his track record of undermining federal protections for imperiled wildlife and prioritizing extractive interests over science-based recovery.

Brian Nesvik has long championed efforts that weaken the Endangered Species Act (ESA), including campaigns to prematurely delist gray wolves, eliminate habitat protections, and sideline federal oversight, all while serving the interests of politically powerful industries in the West. His approach reflects the same harmful ideology behind recent legislative attacks like the ESA Amendments Act (H.R. 1897), which aims to hollow out the Endangered Species Act.

The Endangered Species Act is one of our nation’s most successful and beloved environmental laws. It has prevented the extinction of more than 99% of listed species — from bald eagles to gray whales — and remains a beacon of bipartisan conservation. What imperiled wildlife need now is a science-driven leader committed to recovery, not one who pushes states to sidestep federal accountability and science.

We are not alone in our concerns. Organizations across the country, including Wyoming Wildlife Advocates, Western Watersheds Project, WildEarth Guardians, Center for Biological Diversity, Sierra Club, and GreenLatinos, stood firmly against this nomination. These are frontline groups who have seen the real impacts of policies that erode protections, fragment habitats, and put species on a collision course with extinction.

In the words of our Executive Director, Susan Holmes:

“The Endangered Species Act only works when science leads the way. Political appointees who disregard habitat science, suppress recovery recommendations, or champion premature delisting put our most vulnerable wildlife at grave risk. This confirmation is a setback — but our fight to defend endangered species is far from over.”

We remain committed to holding the Fish and Wildlife Service accountable and to protecting the integrity of the Endangered Species Act against political interference. We urge members of Congress and the public to stand with us and with the science to ensure the future of America’s most at-risk species.

What our partners are saying:

“Nesvik has a track record of favoring industries over wildlife. Ranching and agriculture and extracted industries get all the concessions here in Wyoming,” said Kristin Combs, Executive Director of Wyoming Wildlife Advocates. “There’s no reason to think that it would be any different at the federal level.”

“Rather than ensuring the survival of America’s most at-risk wildlife, Nesvik’s history suggests he will do the opposite—greenlighting more destruction, more killing, and more habitat loss,” said Joanna Zhang, endangered species advocate at WildEarth Guardians.

“WildEarth Guardians and our allies will fight every step of the way to hold this administration accountable and protect our nation’s wildlife from this disastrous leadership.”

“Nesvik’s lackadaisical response to the tormenting of that young Wyoming wolf speaks volumes about his lack of care for wildlife,” said Stephanie Kurose, Center for Biological Diversity Deputy Director of Government Affairs. “But his larger record truly underscores how deeply he despises the Fish and Wildlife Service’s fundamental mission. Most Americans want our imperiled wildlife protected, but we can’t count on Nesvik to lift a finger to prevent extinction.”

“Nesvik’s tenure as head of Wyoming Game and Fish prioritized trophy hunts and weakened protections for imperiled species over scientifically sound wildlife management,” said Bradley Williams, Sierra Club’s Deputy Legislative Director for Wildlife and Lands Protection. “One of the USFWS most important roles is upholding the Endangered Species Act, and given his experience, it’s not clear whether Nesvik will be able to fulfill that duty. Unfortunately, it appears that wildlife will pay the price.”

“California’s national wildlife refuges are a cornerstone of Latino communities’ access to nature and biodiversity,” said Pedro Hernandez, California State Program Manager for GreenLatinos. “Our refuge system and successful Endangered Species Act implementation have supported California as a global biodiversity hotspot. Yet, Brian Nesvik’s nomination risks years of progress and his track record threatens to roll back the clock to a time when our refuge system was even more under-resourced and dominated by extractive interests. Our communities can’t afford leadership that deprioritizes science, equity, species protections and ecological integrity.”

“Brian Nesvik has repeatedly used state power to undermine the very laws he’s now charged with upholding. His confirmation as Director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is a gift to extractive industries and a threat to imperiled species across the West,” said Josh Osher, Public Policy Director for Western Watersheds Project. “From sanctioning wolf slaughter to promoting unsustainable livestock grazing on public lands, Nesvik has consistently prioritized industry profits over ecological integrity. We need leadership rooted in science and recovery — not someone who treats the Endangered Species Act as an obstacle to be dismantled.”

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Fight continues against Trump’s War on Columbia Snake River Salmon https://www.endangered.org/fight-continues-against-trumps-war-on-columbia-snake-river-salmon/ Fri, 18 Jul 2025 17:18:17 +0000 https://www.endangered.org/?p=35396 Fight continues against Trump’s War on the Columbia Snake River Salmon Efforts to recover endangered Southern Resident Killer whales and threatened and endangered Columbia and Snake River salmon and steelhead are not surprisingly under attack by the Trump Administration and Republicans in…

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Fight continues against Trump’s War on the Columbia Snake River Salmon

Efforts to recover endangered Southern Resident Killer whales and threatened and endangered Columbia and Snake River salmon and steelhead are not surprisingly under attack by the Trump Administration and Republicans in Congress.

The Endangered Species Coalition, along with our conservation, faith, fishing, and Tribal allies, are fighting back at the local, state, and national level.

The Trump Administration negated the historic 2023 Resilient Columbia Basin Agreement between the U.S. government, states, and tribes, which aimed to restore salmon populations and explore the removal of Lower Snake River dams.

The Bonneville Power Administration called for eliminating long-standing Columbia River basin salmon recovery goals, over the objections of State and Tribal fisheries experts. 

And Senator Jim Risch (R-ID) and Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-WA) proposed legislation that would doom Idaho’s wild salmon and steelhead by locking in illegal operations at federal dams on the Snake and Columbia Rivers.

We responded at the grassroots level by getting our members to contact and weigh in against these proposals to our Pacific Northwest congressional representatives and senators, as well as Washington State’s new Governor Ferguson.

Volunteers and staff conducted outreach and education to the public about these threats during June’s Pacific Northwest Orca Month. We tabled at musical and community events, Seattle’s Orca Festival, and helped organize a scientist webinar.  New congressional members, including Congresswoman Emily Randall of the Olympic Peninsula and Washington’s Governor Ferguson, were targeted. Action items for the public included postcards, QR codes, and text codes on stickers that were passed out.

We asked that state and congressional elected officials support the Columbia Basin Restoration Initiative, which was developed by Washington, Oregon, and four Columbia Basin Tribes. This initiative provides a comprehensive new roadmap for salmon recovery, including a call to replace the energy, transportation, irrigation, and recreation services provided by the lower Snake River dams so that they can be breached.

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Sea Turtles Won’t Survive the ESA Amendments Act https://www.endangered.org/sea-turtles-wont-survive-the-esa-amendments-act/ Thu, 19 Jun 2025 00:30:23 +0000 https://www.endangered.org/?p=35360 Sea Turtles Won’t Survive the ESA Amendments Act Authored by Sarah Masters, policy research intern for Endangered Species Coalition, and Jewel Tomasula, National Policy Director.   About Sea Turtles  Sea turtles are some of the most amazing creatures in our oceans.…

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Sea Turtles Won’t Survive the ESA Amendments Act

Authored by Sarah Masters, policy research intern for Endangered Species Coalition, and Jewel Tomasula, National Policy Director.

 

About Sea Turtles 

Sea turtles are some of the most amazing creatures in our oceans. As keystone species for the world’s waters, these beautiful reptiles keep plankton species in check along with cleaning and maintaining coral reefs and grass beds. Six species of sea turtles live in the oceans surrounding the United States: green, loggerhead, Kemp’s ridley, leatherback, hawksbill, and olive ridley turtles. Nearshore and offshore in-water habitats provide foraging grounds, migratory corridors, mating grounds, and shelter for sea turtles. Many of them make their nests on beaches in places like Florida –  where 90% of sea turtles nest in the U.S. – and in locations including Hawaii, Texas, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina. 

Like people, sea turtles eat a variety of foods. Some species prefer foods that are see-through and transparent in water, like jellyfish and algae. Because these foods are easily mistaken for floating plastic pollution, one cause of sea turtle endangerment is the accidental consumption of ocean-bourne plastics.  

Boat strikes are another major threat to sea turtles. Sea turtles need to come up to the surface to breathe, and that’s when fast-moving boats can hit them. Many sea turtles don’t have time to get out of the way, especially in busy areas with lots of boat traffic. The blunt-force trauma from a boat strike is usually deadly for sea turtles. 

The top danger to sea turtles comes from commercial fishing activity. Large fishing industries use nets and hooks that accidentally trap sea turtles. These turtles can’t escape and often drown because they can’t get to the surface to breathe. 

Protecting Sea Turtles 

Sea turtles are protected under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), one of the strongest conservation laws in the world! The Endangered Species Act (ESA) is a U.S. law passed in 1973 to protect animals and plants that are at risk of extinction. Its main goals are: prevent extinction of endangered and threatened species, protect and restore habitats critical to those species, and promote recovery so species can eventually be removed from the endangered list. The law is administered by two federal agencies: the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) for land and freshwater species, and the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) for marine species. The ESA prohibits harming listed species and requires federal agencies to ensure their actions don’t jeopardize them or their habitats. 

There are two important parts of the ESA that help sea turtles today:

  • Section 7 requires that any project (like construction near the beach or in the ocean) must avoid harm to sea turtles or the places where they live and nest. Thanks to this part of the law, the Atlantic green sea turtle population grew by 76% between 1979 and 2016!
  • Section 9 makes it illegal to harm sea turtles or their eggs. This includes the illegal trading of their eggs. This illegal trade undermines decades of conservation efforts, as each stolen egg represents a lost chance for population recovery.  As a result of this and other complications, wildlife agency officials, with help from people in the local community, carefully monitor beaches where sea turtles nest to protect them from activities that would hurt them. To protect sea turtles in the water, fishing boats must use special gear like turtle excluder devices, which help the turtles escape from nets. Boats also use special hooks and follow rules to reduce bycatch (accidentally catching turtles).

Another important rule is the Vessel Speed Rule, which sets slow zones for ships along the Atlantic coast. This protection is designed to reduce fatal ship strikes with North Atlantic right whales, but it helps other ocean animals that need to swim to the surface to breathe – including sea turtles.

The Problem with Proposals to Amend the Endangered Species Act

Recently, changes were proposed to the Endangered Species Act through the ESA Amendments Act of 2025. These changes could harm sea turtles in several ways:

Boat strikes could increase. The proposed elimination of vessel slow zones could lead to more turtles being hit by boats. When boats hit sea turtles, they usually suffer serious injuries. Some develop something called Bubble Butt Syndrome, where air gets trapped under their shell after a spinal injury. This makes it hard for them to dive for food or hide due to positive buoyancy, and many can’t survive in the wild.

Left: Image of a sea turtle with Bubble Butt Syndrome, with weights on its back to aid in neutral buoyancy. Right: Image of a sea turtle that was involved in a boat strike. (photo credit: Sarah Masters)

  • Projects could get a pass to harm sea turtles and their nests. The changes would make it harder for wildlife agencies to stop projects from destroying sea turtle habitat. For example, beach construction or bright lights at night disturb nesting turtles, but these might not be stopped under the ESA amendments.
  • “Conservation” might be replaced with “regulated taking.” This change would mean more fishing lines and nets in the water, increasing the chances of turtles getting caught or injured.
  • Faster permitting, fewer protections. Developers would get speedy approval to build or change coastal areas, skipping science-based reviews of how projects impact sea turtles. This makes it harder to protect the nesting grounds that are critical for recovering sea turtle populations.

If legal protections are changed by the U.S. Congress, recovering sea turtles who have benefited from human interventions under the ESA may be at great risk of extinction due to failure to implement conservation practices that will support sea turtle survival.

What You Can Do to Help

  • Contact your representatives in Congress. Let them know that you care about protecting sea turtles and keeping the ESA strong. Send an email today!
  • Send sea turtle postcards to policymakers. You can help educate your friends, family or community and take action at the same time by hosting a postcard writing party. Find postcards and toolkits here.
  • Join conservation efforts. You can volunteer to clean up trash in waterways near you to help stop plastic from making it to the ocean. You can also support sea turtle research and conservation organizations such as the Sea Turtle Conservancy (conserveturtles.org).

    Sea turtles have come a long way, but they still need our help. We must make sure that the laws protecting them stay strong.
 

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Over 150,000 Americans Oppose Trump Administration’s Unprecedented Effort to Eliminate Habitat Protections for Vulnerable Wildlife https://www.endangered.org/trumps-change-of-esa-definition-of-harm-is-a-disaster-for-at-risk-species/ Mon, 19 May 2025 17:30:00 +0000 https://www.endangered.org/?p=35095 Scientists, legal experts, and environmental groups also urge Trump administration to drop proposed rule   WASHINGTON D.C. — Over 150,000 Americans have opposed a proposed rulemaking by the Trump administration to eliminate major habitat protections for endangered species in the…

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Scientists, legal experts, and environmental groups also urge Trump administration to drop proposed rule

 

WASHINGTON D.C. — Over 150,000 Americans have opposed a proposed rulemaking by the Trump administration to eliminate major habitat protections for endangered species in the U.S. after it was unveiled in April — and as the period for public input concludes today. The proposed rule would rescind the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s and National Marine Fisheries Service’s definitions of what counts as illegal “harm” to threatened and endangered wildlife under the Endangered Species Act (ESA).

“Harm” is currently defined to include significant habitat modification that kills or injures species by removing necessities such as food and shelter. The current definition of “harm” is an important tool for habitat conservation that has been in place for over 40 years and was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1995.

It has been integral to the ESA’s role in saving more than 99 percent of species under its protection including the bald eagle, Florida manatee, gray wolf, and many other iconic American wildlife. Even with the incredible success of the ESA, over 90 percent of listed species remain threatened by human-caused habitat destruction. If anything, the case for habitat protection under the ESA has grown even stronger over the years, with mountains of scientific evidence linking habitat and species’ survival.

The ESA was passed by Congress in 1973 with virtually unanimous bipartisan support. The lawmakers behind the ESA knew that scientists — not politicians — should decide whether vulnerable animal and plant species should be protected. In their spirit, three U.S. senators have officially demanded that the Trump administration explain how it came to its determination to eliminate habitat protections for U.S. wildlife and to answer whether industry influence was involved.

Additionally, a group of the nation’s leading scientists and experts on wildlife sent a letter to the Trump administration urging it to abandon the proposed rule, which the scientists state “lacks any scientific basis and misinterprets the Endangered Species Act.” And 25 legal scholars expressed “vehement opposition” to the proposed rule in a letter to the administration. The outpouring of public opposition to the proposed rule change is no surprise. Over 80 percent of Americans support the ESA. Most Americans know how important conserving habitats, lands, and waters are to our everyday lives and that protecting them should be a national priority. The stakes aren’t limited to wildlife — when ecosystems degrade, people suffer from threats to clean water, food security, and public health.

In response to the tens of thousands of Americans who are calling on the Trump administration to abandon its effort to eliminate habitat protections for vulnerable wildlife, 131 environmental and animal welfare groups from across the country issued the following statements:

 

“Tens of thousands of Americans have rejected the Trump administration’s callous effort to steal habitat away from our endangered species,” said Earthjustice attorney Kristen Boyles. “Trump’s proposed rule recklessly ignores common sense and common science. We’ll do all that we can to ensure vulnerable wildlife continue to have a livable habitat and a chance at survival.”

“Wildlife cannot survive without habitat — that’s not opinion, that’s biology,” said Josh Osher, public policy director for Western Watersheds Project. “This proposed rule is an industry-crafted blueprint for extinction, designed to let corporations destroy the very ground endangered species stand on, while pretending no harm is being done.”

“Loving wildlife is baked into our national heritage. Americans are very proud that our nation has prioritized conserving birds, fish and other wildlife that make our country so special,” said Ramona McGee, leader of the Southern Environmental Law Center’s Wildlife Program. “Here in the South, the stakes are much higher because of our world-renowned biodiversity, which is increasingly at risk from human-made factors like habitat destruction from unchecked, harmful development. It is unconscionable that our leaders are unnecessarily attempting to remove vital wildlife and habitat protections to placate extractive industries.” 

“This nonstarter proposal ignores critical conservation provisions in a law that supports America’s most at-risk fish, wildlife, and plant populations, including over 600 species with habitat in our national parks,” said Christina Hazard, legislative director for the National Parks Conservation Association. “When food sources, nesting grounds or mating grounds are lost outside of national park boundaries, park wildlife will be lost as well.”

“Habitat integrity is among the most significant determinants of species’ survival; this rule change would jeopardize imperiled animals and entire ecosystems,” said Danielle Kessler, US Country Director at the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW). “Effective, science-driven implementation of the Endangered Species Act–including habitat protection–benefits animals and people alike.”

“The Trump administration is attempting to dismantle and discredit one of America’s most popular and successful laws,” said Sierra Weaver, senior attorney at Defenders of Wildlife. “The current definition of ‘harm’ is a large part of what has made the ESA so effective at conserving imperiled species. This isn’t just redefining one word — it is gutting the heart of the Act. It will have cataclysmic consequences to the habitats, lands and waters that America’s wildlife relies upon, and goes against Congress’ intent for the law.”

“Extinction is forever,” says Katherine Miller, Country Director for FOUR PAWS USA. “If we allow the ESA to be weakened and species’ habitats to be destroyed for profit, the consequences of these decisions will reverberate for generations. Science has shown that protecting a listed species’ habitat is vital to their survival and recovery. This is why we urge FWS and NMFS to withdraw their proposed rule and uphold America’s commitment to save endangered species, ensuring a livable planet for all of us.”

“Loss of habitat is the number one reason species become endangered,” said Susan Holmes, Executive Director of the Endangered Species Coalition. “Trump’s draconian proposal to end habitat protection for our most vulnerable wildlife rips out the heart of the Endangered Species Act and would put countless species on the path to extinction.”

“The Services’ proposal shows they are not serious about protecting imperiled species,” said Rebecca Riley, managing director for Food & Agriculture at NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council). “Habitat destruction is the number one threat to species’ survival, and yet they are coming up with weak excuses to claim Congress didn’t intend to address this existential threat.”

“Trump’s smash-and-grab habitat plan could welcome bulldozers and drilling rigs into the beautiful wild places that America’s most imperiled animals call home,” said Tara Zuardo, a senior campaigner at the Center for Biological Diversity. “The administration’s proposal seeks to rip a bloody hole in the Endangered Species Act, prioritizing industry profits over protecting habitat that’s crucial to preventing extinction. This is an illegal attempt to nullify a landmark wildlife law that’s supported by nearly every American who isn’t an oil executive, a timber baron or a Trump appointee.”

“Piping Plovers were set on a path to extinction due to millinery and hunting at the turn of the 19th century,” said Chris Allieri, founder and executive director, NYC Plover Project. “These are not the challenges the species is currently facing. The number one threat today is habitat loss, wherever they are found, including their wintering and breeding ranges. Without habitat protection, this species, and countless more, will go extinct.”

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Collaborating for Biodiversity Gallery Launches https://www.endangered.org/collaborating-for-biodiversity-gallery-launches/ Wed, 14 May 2025 22:56:11 +0000 https://www.endangered.org/?p=35292 Collaborating for Biodiversity Youth Art Gallery Launches for 20th Endangered Species Day  View incredible, collaborative works of art by youth artists grades K-12 at our newly launched online gallery, Collaborating for Biodiversity These multi-media artworks depict imperiled United States species…

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 View incredible, collaborative works of art by youth artists grades K-12 at our newly launched online gallery, Collaborating for Biodiversity

These multi-media artworks depict imperiled United States species protected by the Endangered Species Act. To learn more about each species and the motivation behind the artworks, expand the tabs below the images and read youth artist statements and more. 

We’ve created this gallery to honor the 20th Anniversary of Endangered Species Day and call of strong protections for wildlife and plants under the Endangered Species Act. Join ESC in advocating to keep strong protections for our irreplaceable United States species.

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Endangered Species Day Marks Its 20th Anniversary https://www.endangered.org/endangered-species-day-marks-its-20th-anniversary/ Tue, 13 May 2025 19:14:46 +0000 https://www.endangered.org/?p=35230 Hundreds of Events Planned Across the U.S. to Celebrate Our Most Endangered Wildlife Washington, D.C. – On Friday, May 16, thousands of Americans will participate in Endangered Species Day events and activities nationwide, recognizing the public’s commitment to protecting and…

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Hundreds of Events Planned Across the U.S. to Celebrate Our Most Endangered Wildlife

Washington, D.C. – On Friday, May 16, thousands of Americans will participate in Endangered Species Day events and activities nationwide, recognizing the public’s commitment to protecting and restoring our disappearing wildlife. This is the 20th annual Endangered Species Day, which is held on the third Friday of May. 

Immensely, popular and successful, the Endangered Species Act has been at the core of our country’s commitment to protecting wildlife and the natural world for our children and grandchildren since 1973. Ninety-nine percent of species protected under the Endangered Species Act have been saved from extinction, including the humpback whale and bald eagle. The Endangered Species Act protects over 2,000 species of plants and animals that are threatened or endangered. 

This year, Endangered Species Day occurs as thousands of people across the United States speak out against billionaire-backed proposals to weaken environmental protections, including the Endangered Species Act, and call on their elected officials to uphold safeguards for biodiversity.

“Endangered Species Day honors our national responsibility to future generations to be good stewards of nature,” stated Susan Holmes, Executive Director of the Endangered Species Coalition–the primary sponsor of Endangered Species Day. “The Endangered Species Act is our safety net for fish, plants, and wildlife on the brink of extinction. Because of the Endangered Species Act, gray whales still swim our oceans, peregrine falcons still soar our skies, and polar bears roam the arctic tundra.”

Endangered Species Day was first created by the U.S. Senate in 2006, when it unanimously designated May 11, 2006, as the first ever “Endangered Species Day” to encourage “the people of the United States to become educated about, and aware of, threats to species, success stories in species recovery, and the opportunity to promote species conservation worldwide.”

The Endangered Species Act was passed because Americans believed then, as they do now, that protecting our wildlife is a moral imperative and a responsibility to future generations. It protects more than our fellow creatures; it also safeguards our nation’s environmental health and the heart of the American way of life. 

Congress, states, and towns across the country also recognize Endangered Species Day. In Boone and Chapel Hill, NC, the towns will vote on proclamations tomorrow designating May 16th, 2025, as Endangered Species Day to show their support for the Endangered Species Act and its protections of our most vulnerable wildlife, like the Hellbender. 

On May 16th, and throughout the month, wildlife refuges, zoos, aquariums, parks, botanic gardens, schools, libraries, museums, and community groups will hold Endangered Species Day events. Some highlights include:

  • A nationwide chalk art contest, hosted by the Endangered Species Coalition;
  • Colorado Endangered Species Week, a week of free educational events and fun advocacy opportunities to protect the plant and animal species at risk in Colorado, including a discussion about Colorados Wolverine reintroduction an evening bat walk, a celebration of CO public lands, and an auction, hosted by Rocky Mountain Wild and Bat Conservation International; 
  • Special exhibits and activities at zoos nationwide are part of AZA’s Party for the Planet celebrations. Party for the Planet offers families unique opportunities to visit their local AZA-accredited zoo and aquarium, celebrate the Earth’s biodiversity, and learn how they can take action to make a difference. This year, they focus on three action areas: Conserve, Create, and Connect to nature.
  • Pollinator garden plantings in states across the U.S. to create habitat for native bees, butterflies, and other pollinator species.
  • Community Science projects involve volunteers using a phone app to find and record as many species as possible in a specific location. 
  • Film screenings and postcard parties- ESC put together a list of films on endangered species and their habitats for individuals to organize events for their friends and families, and take action to protect them afterward.

These and other events are listed in an event directory on the Endangered Species Day website

In addition to the Endangered Species Coalition, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), numerous conservation, education, community and youth organizations have also supported and participated in Endangered Species Day, including the Girl Scouts USA, the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, the Smithsonian, National Wildlife Federation, Sierra Club, and many more. 

Visit www.EndangeredSpeciesDay.org for more information on Endangered Species Day, including event locations and a variety of educational resource materials.

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Postcards to Policymakers Launch https://www.endangered.org/postcards-to-policymakers-launch/ Tue, 13 May 2025 17:59:19 +0000 https://www.endangered.org/?p=35220 Postcards to Policymakers Postcards to Policymakers is a new project launching the week of the 20th Anniversary of  Endangered Species Day, May 16th, 2025. This project is designed for you, to help you advocate for wildlife and plants. This project is…

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Postcards to Policymakers is a new project launching the week of the 20th Anniversary of  Endangered Species Day, May 16th, 2025.

This project is designed for you, to help you advocate for wildlife and plants. This project is created for your community, to help you come together for fun postcard writing events. 

We’ve assembled a set of free, downloadable postcards created by artist-activists, and useful toolkits where you can learn more about imperiled wildlife and plants. Postcards to Policymakers species range from monarch butterflies to grizzly bears with more postcards coming later this year.

Join the movement calling for continued strong Endangered Species Act protections with Postcards to Policymakers!

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Endangered Species Coalition Responds to Republican-led Congressional Attacks on Endangered Species Act and Gray Wolves https://www.endangered.org/endangered-species-coalition-responds-to-republican-led-congressional-attacks-on-endangered-species-act-and-gray-wolves/ Tue, 25 Mar 2025 15:18:56 +0000 https://www.endangered.org/?p=35092 Groups express wide opposition to proposed legislation. Washington, D.C. —Today, the Republican-led House Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife, and Fisheries will consider legislation that would dramatically weaken the widely popular Endangered Species Act (ESA) and strip protections for gray…

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Groups express wide opposition to proposed legislation.

Washington, D.C. —Today, the Republican-led House Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife, and Fisheries will consider legislation that would dramatically weaken the widely popular Endangered Species Act (ESA) and strip protections for gray wolves in 48 states.

The first bill — the “ESA Amendments Act of 2025” — would gut the critical protections that the ESA provides for thousands of imperiled species, upend the scientific consultation process (which has been the cornerstone of American species protection for 50 years), slow listings to a crawl while fast-tracking delistings, and allow much more exploitation of threatened species and shift their management out of federal hands to the states, even while they are still nationally listed. 

The second bill — the so-called “Pet and Livestock Protection Act of 2025″ — would reissue the first Trump administration’s delisting of the gray wolf across most of the U.S. and bar judicial review of that action. In 2022, a federal court reversed this delisting, after conservation groups challenged it.

In addition to the Republican-led Congressional attacks on the ESA and gray wolves, the Trump administration recently terminated hundreds of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service employees — nearly 5 percent of the agency’s workforce — which is already critically understaffed. Without those employees, it will be even harder for disappearing vulnerable species to receive crucial protections, and for vitally important ecosystems across the U.S. to remain intact.  

In response to attempts to undermine the ESA and delist gray wolves, organizations from across the country sent a letter to HNR leadership outlining opposition to the bills. Additionally, groups from the Endangered Species Coalition issued the following statements:

“These attempts to weaken the Endangered Species Act, or to go around it by picking off species like the gray wolf, represent a fundamental disconnect between a small number of legislators and millions of Americans,” said Earthjustice legislative director for lands, wildlife, and oceans Addie Haughey. “The ESA — and the iconic species it protects — enjoys immense support across the political spectrum. If these bills move forward, Congress will be acting against popular will and ignoring science to sacrifice the wildlife we love and the ecosystems we rely on.”

“Congressman Westerman’s bill would eviscerate the Endangered Species Act and push imperiled species to extinction,” said Ellen Richmond, senior attorney at Defenders of Wildlife. “The Endangered Species Act is the backstop for our nation’s wildlife already at the brink of extinction and this bill would sanction their swift descent into nothingness. We urge our representatives in Congress to listen to the American public’s overwhelming support for the Endangered Species Act and reject this disastrous bill which does nothing to strengthen wildlife protections and instead reverses decades of conservation success.”

“We are in a biodiversity crisis, and Congress is playing with fire. These bills would accelerate extinction at a time when we can least afford it,” said Josh Osher, public policy director for Western Watersheds Project. “The Endangered Species Act isn’t just about saving wolves, grizzlies, or sea turtles—it’s about protecting the ecosystems that sustain us all. Weakening these protections pushes our planet further into collapse. Congress must open its eyes and reject these reckless attacks before it’s too late.”

“These extreme bills would gut protections for wildlife under the Endangered Species Act. They are being introduced against a backdrop of sudden and indiscriminate firings across the US Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, robbing these agencies of the experts who implement these crucial protections based on the best available science,” said Susan Millward, executive director and chief executive officer for the Animal Welfare Institute. “These assaults on wildlife protections come at a time of staggering biodiversity loss, and imperiled species don’t have the luxury of waiting out these political games.”

“Extinction is forever,” says Katherine Miller, Country Director for FOUR PAWS USA. ” If we allow the protections afforded by the ESA to be weakened and undermined by legislation like this, the consequences of these decisions will reverberate for generations. The ESA protects both iconic native species like Bald eagles and non-native species like Bengal tigers. It has also protected millions of acres of habitat, ensuring a livable planet for all of us.”

“The ESA Amendments Act of 2025, introduced by Representative Westerman, is severely out of step with how most Americans view and support wildlife protection. It prioritizes big industry and special interests ahead of decades-long, science-based protections that work,” said Chris Allieri, executive director and founder, NYC Plover Project. “Radicals in Congress are fast-tracking extinction and looking to severely weaken, if not entirely remove, bedrock environmental laws like the Endangered Species Act and Marine Mammal Protection Act.” 

“The Endangered Species Act is one of the country’s most popular and successful conservation laws, and Donald Trump wants to throw it in the garbage to pad the bottom lines of his corporate supporters,” said Bradley Williams, Sierra Club’s Deputy Legislative Director for Wildlife and Lands Protection. “Since Day One of his administration, Trump has shown again and again that he wants to hand over control of our public lands and waters to billionaires and corporations. Imperiled wildlife will suffer the consequences. For more than 50 years, the United States has made amazing progress bringing species back from the brink of extinction. It’s because of the ESA that species like the grizzly bear and bald eagle are living symbols of America and not just photos in a history book. If Trump and his allies in Congress get their way, that progress won’t just come to a screeching halt – it could be completely reversed.”

“For decades, the Endangered Species Act has been a critical lifeline in preventing the irreversible loss of our nation’s wildlife. Legislation like H.R. 845 and H.R. 1897 would undermine this powerful tool against extinction and jeopardize ongoing recovery efforts of our iconic native species, like the gray wolf.” said Jennifer Eskra, Director of Legislative Affairs at Humane World Action Fund “At a time of growing biodiversity loss, it is essential that legislators prioritize science over politics and stand with the millions of Americans who support the ESA.”

“The Endangered Species Act is one of America’s most respected and successful conservation laws. Unfortunately, Representative Westerman’s ESA amendments are crafted for greedy billionaires clinging to a 19th-century vision of plundering the planet,” said Endangered Species Coalition National Policy Director Jewel Tomasula. “This bill would devastate the sea turtles people love to see at the beach, the bumblebees that pollinate our food crops, and the spotted owls that indicate healthy forests. This bill would destroy wildlife and wild places, not protect them.”

“These reckless attacks on the Endangered Species Act and gray wolves are nothing more than a giveaway to industry at the expense of our nation’s most imperiled wildlife,” said Joanna Zhang, endangered species advocate at WildEarth Guardians. “Gutting protections for species on the brink of extinction is not reform—it’s a death sentence. Americans overwhelmingly support the ESA because it works, and we urge our representatives in Congress not to stand by while Trump and his allies try to dismantle one of our most effective conservation laws.”

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Endangered Species Act, Gray Wolves Targeted by Congress https://www.endangered.org/endangered-species-act-gray-wolves-targeted-by-congress/ Tue, 25 Mar 2025 13:50:04 +0000 https://www.endangered.org/?p=35089 House Natural Resources Committee considers bills to eliminate protections for threatened and endangered species and for the gray wolf For Immediate Release: March 25, 2025 Contacts: Jewel Tomasula jewel@endangered.org Susan Holmes sholmes@endangered.org Washington, D.C. – The U.S. House of Representatives…

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House Natural Resources Committee considers bills to eliminate protections for threatened and endangered species and for the gray wolf

For Immediate Release: March 25, 2025
Contacts:
Jewel Tomasula jewel@endangered.org
Susan Holmes sholmes@endangered.org

Washington, D.C. – The U.S. House of Representatives Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Wildlife, and Fisheries will consider legislation to amend the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and a separate bill to remove the gray wolf from the endangered species list today.

Introduced by Representative Westerman (R-AR), the ESA Amendments Act of 2025 (H.R. 1897) would gut core protections for our most endangered wildlife. The bill would bring back regulations put in place by the Trump administration in 2019, which the Biden administration subsequently revised. It would slow the species listing process, speed up delisting, undermine the work of experts at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and gut the consultation process that ensures federal agencies do not take actions that could drive a species extinct.

“The Endangered Species Act is one of America’s most respected and successful conservation laws. Ninety-nine percent of the species listed are with us today because of the ESA. Unfortunately, Representative Westerman’s ESA amendments are crafted for greedy billionaires clinging to a 19th-century vision of plundering the planet,” said Endangered Species Coalition National Policy Director Jewel Tomasula. “This bill would devastate the sea turtles people love to see at the beach, the bumblebees that pollinate our food crops, and the spotted owls that indicate healthy forests. This bill would destroy wildlife and wild places, not protect them.”

The hearing will also consider H.R. 845, sponsored by Representative Boebert (CO-04), which seeks to remove gray wolves from the list of endangered and threatened species and prohibit any challenges to the law in court. Specifically, the bill would reinstate a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) delisting decision issued in November 2020, the end of the first Trump administration, which was overturned in court because FWS did not use the best available science, among other serious errors.

“The return of the gray wolf to the lower-48 states is one of America’s greatest conservation success stories,” said Susan Holmes, Executive Director, Endangered Species Coalition.  “Removing protection for wolves would reverse the recovery of one of our most beloved species and take us back to a time when wolves were shot, trapped, and poisoned until they disappeared from the landscape.  Endangered Species Act protections remain key to ensuring gray wolves return to the American landscape where they belong,” said Holmes.    

“Both these bills are completely out of step with the public and their love of wildlife, “ continued Holmes. “The Endangered Species Act has overwhelming bipartisan support. Eighty-nine percent of democrats and eighty percent of republicans support the ESA,”  said Holmes. According to a recent poll by the National Parks Conservation Association, 84 percent of Americans support returning wolves to suitable national park landscapes in the Lower 48.

Background on the Endangered Species Act

The ESA provides practical solutions to recover plant and animal species threatened with extinction. As of 2023, 99% of all species listed as “endangered” or “threatened” under the ESA have been saved from extinction. Hundreds of species are on the path to recovery, thanks to actions facilitated and enforced under the ESA, which include partnerships with dedicated researchers, field workers, citizen scientists, and volunteers working to save species throughout the country.

Background on gray wolves

Approximately two million gray wolves roamed North America in the early 1800s, but both legal and illegal efforts eradicated them from the continental United States. Today, gray wolf numbers are fewer than 7,000, and they occupy only about 10 percent of their historic range in the Lower 48 States. A successful U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-led restoration effort in the mid-1990s, in partnership with Nez Perce Tribe, brought wolves back throughout the Northern Rockies region, and a voter-initiated effort to restore the species to Colorado began in 2024. Other areas of suitable habitat in the U.S. do not yet have an established population of gray wolves.

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