Center for Biological Diversity

Extinction Crisis: Help Save Species Before It's Too Late

Bookmark and Share

Already in the United States thousands of species – from elk and river otters to frogs and orchids – have been pushed toward extinction because the land and water they depend on has been polluted, paved over, or destroyed.

To save and recover these imperiled plants and animals, we have the strongest law in the world for protecting species: the Endangered Species Act. But it can only work if we use it. Unfortunately, the Obama administration has recently refused protections for more than 259 imperiled plants and animals in the United States that are critically close to extinction. Instead of taking action now, the administration put them on a waiting list, where they'll remain without protection for years or even decades.

We must take action today to tell the administration to do right by plants and animals that desperately need protection.

If we do nothing, species like these will go extinct in our lifetimes: the Pacific fisher, a fierce but imperiled carnivore that lives in fast-disappearing old-growth forests along the West Coast; Montana fluvial Arctic grayling, a near-extinct purple-silver fish; and the Black Warrior waterdog, a large, gilled salamander that's been waiting for protection since 1991.

We need to get them on the endangered species list immediately – because that's the only way that killing them becomes illegal and the only way to save their habitat from logging, bulldozing and other forms of destruction. Please fill in the form below to add your name to our petition to President Obama and then share with all your friends. Thank you for being part of the solution.

Dear President Obama,

The Endangered Species Act is the strongest law in the world for protecting species from extinction. But this landmark law only protects species after they have been added to the lists of threatened and endangered species. It is for this reason that I am deeply concerned about the continued denial of protection for 251 species that have been waiting for help for decades, languishing on the government's list of Endangered Species Act "candidate" species. I urge you to provide immediate protection to these species, many of which are on the brink of extinction.

On Nov. 10, your administration released the latest review of these "candidate" species. Rather than providing protection for the 251 identified in this document, however, you have decided to continue to delay their protection. On average, these species have been waiting 20 years for protection, during which time they have continued to decline or in some cases disappeared forever. Indeed, at least 24 species have gone extinct after being designated a candidate for protection, including the Louisiana prairie vole, Tacoma pocket gopher, San Gabriel Mountains blue butterfly and Sangre de Cristo peaclam. Additional extinctions of candidate species can only be avoided by providing immediate protection to these 251 species.

Extinction cannot be reversed. All of these 251 species are part of our natural heritage and are too precious to lose. Among those awaiting protections are: the Pacific fisher, a relative of the mink and otter that is the only animal that regularly preys on porcupines and is threatened by loss of old-growth forests on the West Coast; the elfin-woods warbler, a striking black and white songbird from the mountains of Puerto Rico threatened by habitat loss and fragmentation and that has been waiting for protection since 1982; and the Black Warrior waterdog, a large gilled salamander that is known from just 14 streams in the Black Warrior River system in Alabama and has been waiting for protection since 1991.

In signing this petition, I urge you to provide immediate protection to these 251 species.

Sincerely,
This petition is no longer active.
51-75 of 35520 signatures
Number Date Name Location
35470 Fri Nov 30 20:48:42 EST 2012 Bonnie Bakkom Sarasota, FL , US
35469 Fri Nov 30 19:46:36 EST 2012 michael comstock Los Angeles, CA , US
35468 Fri Nov 30 19:39:33 EST 2012 Amy Leigh Garland Acworth, GA , US
35467 Fri Nov 30 18:33:39 EST 2012 Lewin Guillaume Buchholz Berlin, ot , DE
35466 Fri Nov 30 18:21:17 EST 2012 mauricio carvajal Santiago, ot , CL
35465 Fri Nov 30 18:12:53 EST 2012 terry kourda chula vista, CA , US
35464 Fri Nov 30 18:11:56 EST 2012 Michael Ames Castro Valley, CA , US
35463 Fri Nov 30 17:41:16 EST 2012 Darleen Mc Naul Holland, PA , US
35462 Fri Nov 30 17:11:29 EST 2012 Brian Collins oceanside, CA , US
35461 Fri Nov 30 14:31:16 EST 2012 Dianne Miller San Diego, CA , US
35460 Fri Nov 30 14:07:48 EST 2012 Robyn Gillette Berkeley, CA , US
35459 Fri Nov 30 13:55:46 EST 2012 Audrey Jane Anderson Los Altos, CA , US
35458 Fri Nov 30 13:53:44 EST 2012 joshua heffron NYC, NY , US
35457 Fri Nov 30 13:52:38 EST 2012 Dena Schwimmer Los Angeles, CA , US
35456 Fri Nov 30 13:50:43 EST 2012 Fiorella Aprosio Sanremo, ot , IT
35455 Fri Nov 30 13:24:03 EST 2012 Candace Niccolson Newark, CA , US
35454 Fri Nov 30 13:22:03 EST 2012 Katherine Langa Doral, FL , US
35453 Fri Nov 30 13:22:03 EST 2012 Katherine Langa Doral, FL , US
35452 Fri Nov 30 13:09:30 EST 2012 Timothy Bryan Durango, CO , US
35451 Fri Nov 30 11:03:29 EST 2012 yvette simpson taunton, MA , US
35450 Fri Nov 30 10:42:13 EST 2012 alunni ilaria corciano, ot , IT
35449 Fri Nov 30 10:20:01 EST 2012 Valentina Khoury Scottsdale, AZ , US
35448 Fri Nov 30 09:22:00 EST 2012 Anna Maier New York, NY , US
35447 Fri Nov 30 09:06:59 EST 2012 Anonymous Westbrook, ME , US
35446 Fri Nov 30 08:55:46 EST 2012 Richard Brewster Baltimore, MD , US
<- Prev Next ->

*Fields marked with an asterisk are required.

Mountain yellow-legged frog photo by Adam Backlin, USGS.