We Eco-Art in support biological diversity, and Earth Day 2026, Publisher, and eco-art conservationists, Jamie Forbes Fineartmagazineblog.blogspot.com, and Sunstormfrineartmagazine.com
No. 1,345, April 16, 2026 |
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Trump Aims to Gut Endangered Species Act |
A Trump administration proposal to weaken the country’s strongest legal tool for protecting rare and vanishing species moved to White House review Friday. In a regulatory sleight of hand, the administration is trying to eliminate most habitat protections from the Endangered Species Act by striking habitat destruction from the definition of harm, which is strictly prohibited by the Act. Of course we can’t save species from extinction if we let their homes be destroyed. "Habitat destruction remains the leading cause of extinction and species endangerment,” said Noah Greenwald, the Center for Biological Diversity’s codirector of endangered species. “There's no way to protect these species without protecting the places they live." Also moving forward last week were proposals to take away threatened species’ protections, limit designation of critical habitat, and strip safeguards from grizzly bears across the lower 48 states. Read more at Politico or ABC News and stay tuned for what’s next. |
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Suits Defends Panthers From Massive Development |
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Court Blocks Off-Road Vehicles at Oceano Dunes |
Responding to a Center lawsuit, a federal court just ruled that the California Department of Parks and Recreation broke the law by letting off-road vehicles harm and kill imperiled snowy plovers at the Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area. Despite a long list of incidents where vehicles ran over snowy plovers, for decades state officials have kept greenlighting motorized vehicle use at Oceano Dunes without a proper permit. That has to stop, the court said. “The court’s ruling makes it clear that off-roading in snowy plover habitat violates the Endangered Species Act,” said Center attorney Zeynep Graves. |
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Arizona Court Win on Cattle: Feds Broke the Law |
A federal court has ruled in favor of wildlife in a Center suit over Agua Fria National Monument, deciding that the Bureau of Land Management and Fish and Wildlife Service violated the Endangered Species Act by ignoring years of damage from illegal livestock grazing to rare desert stream habitat for imperiled fish and birds. “I’m hopeful this will shock slumbering agencies into finally fixing the problem and working to save Gila chubs and yellow-billed cuckoos,” said the Center’s Chris Bugbee. “It’s not too late to repair our public lands and keep wildlife from sliding into extinction.” |
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Protect Bears and Wolves in Alaska |
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Revelator: Saving Bull Kelp |
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That’s Wild: The Search for the Snail Holy Grail |
Hawai‘i boasts an extraordinary rich heritage of land snails who live nowhere else on Earth, but more than half have been driven extinct through habitat loss and exotic species in the wake of colonization. Researchers and conservationists are hard at work trying to captive-breed some of the most precariously endangered of the remaining snails — for eventual re-release into the wild — but a central problem is figuring out exactly what foods let the animals not only survive but thrive. In recent years biologists have been helicoptering into high-elevation Hawaiian forests to bring back just the right leaves, with just the right kinds of microbes on them, to suit the gastropods’ fancy. But the expeditions aren’t without hazards; sometimes microbes introduced with the vegetation disrupts the balance in captivity, playing a part in fatalities. So now the scientists are even sequencing the DNA on the leaf microbes to learn more about what the snails need — and have started to grow cyanobacteria in the lab to feed them. #jamieellinforbes#eco-artavocate#thecenterforbiological diversity#fineartmagazineblog.blogspot.com#sunstormfineartmagazine.com.#eco-art fun#artfunforever, |
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