Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumLawsuit Seeks to Protect Monarchs Under Endangered Species Act
WASHINGTON - Two conservation groups, the Center for Biological Diversity and Center for Food Safety, today sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to force officials to set a binding date to finalize federal protections for monarch butterflies under the Endangered Species Act.
The monarch was proposed for protection in December 2024, making the final listing due in December 2025. The groups argue the delay increases extinction risk for the nationally beloved pollinator.
Comprehensive protections are urgently needed to ensure a future for these migratory wonders, said Tierra Curry, endangered species co-director at the Center for Biological Diversity. Monarchs unite us and its disgraceful that their future is being sacrificed to political nonsense.
Instead of issuing the final listing at the end of 2025, Trump officials delayed the decision as a long-term action, with no definitive date for issuance provided. The federal assessment of the monarchs status found that in the next 60 years western migratory monarchs have up to a 99% chance of going extinct and eastern monarchs have up to a 74% chance.
https://www.commondreams.org/newswire/lawsuit-seeks-to-protect-monarchs-under-endangered-species-act
Turbineguy
(39,924 posts)NNadir
(37,615 posts)They used to be plentiful in the fields. When my boys were small we'd raise then for the eggs laid on milkweed leaves until they'd gone through the stages of metamorphosis to spread their wings and be released.
The experience allowed me the chance to give them lectures about sugar based cardiotoxins to which the Monarch's are immune, but they couldn't have cared less. What they did care about was that they'd raised caterpillars who eventually became butterflies who would fly away.
It is sad that magic will be rare for future children.
2naSalit
(101,237 posts)Where I was all summer and I saw maybe two. Used to be all over the place around here.
