SHARE:
submit to reddit
print



Obama slower than Bush in protecting America's endangered species
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com
November 08, 2009


In George W. Bush's eight years as president, he placed 62 species under the protection of the Endangered Species Act (ESA), an average of eight species per year. While, Bush's slow pace in protecting endangered species frustrated environmentalists in light of continued decline among many species, Obama is moving even slower.

In the ten months that he has been in office, President Obama has listed only one species under the ESA: a Hawaiian plant which is down to only a few individuals. While the Obama Administration has identified 249 species that are candidates for protection, it has been painfully slow in actually granting the protection.

"Continued delays in protection of these 249 species is a failure of leadership by Interior Secretary Salazar," said Noah Greenwald, endangered species director at the Center for Biological Diversity. "And that failure is placing these species at greater risk of extinction. The position of chief of conservation and classification hasn’t even been filled yet, exemplifying the failure of the Obama administration to prioritize species conservation."

A candidate species does not receive any protections legal or otherwise, and these delays—sometimes lasting decades—can lead to extinction. So far, 24 species have vanished entirely while waiting to be listed under ESA.

The species on the candidate list range from the Eastern massasauga snake which has seen much of its wetland habitat taken up by sprawl to the white fringeless orchid which has waited for thirty years to be placed under the ESA.

President Bill Clinton protected on average 62 species a year with a total of 522, while President George H. Bush protected 231, averaging 58 species a year. Obama and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar have a long way to go in the next two months if they are to catch-up.

"Because extinction is forever, delays in protection of the nation’s most imperiled species are unacceptable," said Greenwald. "The Endangered Species Act can save these 249 species, but only if they are granted protection."

UPDATE: The slickspot peppergrass will be listed in December. A further five listings have been made, but these are due to taxonomy changes, for instance a salamander species was discovered to actually be two species, so now they are both listed. Both the Oregon chub and the gray wolf in Idaho in Montana have been delisted, the latter decision has proved extremely controversial.







Related articles

Environmental disappointments under Obama

(08/24/2009) While the President has been bogged down for the last couple months in an increasingly histrionic health-care debate-which has devolved so far into ridiculousness that one doesn't know whether to laugh or cry-environmental decisions, mostly from the President's appointees have still been coming fast and furious. However, while the administration started out pouring sunshine on the environment (after years of obfuscated drudgery under the Bush administration), they soon began to move away from truly progressive decisions on the environment and into the recognizable territory of playing it safe-and sometimes even stupid.


As wolves face the gun, flawed science taints decision to remove species from ESA

(05/07/2009) On Monday the gray wolf was removed from the Endangered Species Act (ESA) in Idaho and Montana, two states that have protected the wolf for decades. According to the federal government the decision to remove those wolf populations was based on sound conservation science—a fact greatly disputed in conservation circles. For unlike the bald eagle, whose population is still rising after being delisted in 1995, when the wolf is removed from the ESA it will face guns blazing and an inevitable decline.


Obama administration overturns rule that weakened Endangered Species Act

(04/28/2009) Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced today that the Obama administration will reverse an Endangered Species Act (ESA) regulation that allowed federal agencies to go ahead with actions that may impact endangered species without consulting with experts, essentially circumventing the role of conservation scientists in such decisions.




SHARE THIS ARTICLE:
print


CITATION:
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com (November 08, 2009). Obama slower than Bush in protecting America's endangered species. http://news.mongabay.com/2009/1108-hance_obama_esa.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+MongabaycomNews+%28Mongabay.com+news%29



News index | RSS | News Feed | Twitter | Home


Advertisements:


Organic Apparel from Patagonia | Insect-repelling clothing







Mongabay Store
Wildlife of Madagascar T-shirt
Wildlife of Madagascar T-shirt
Bold and Dangerous - Pygmy tyrant t-shirts
Bold and Dangerous - Pygmy tyrant
Love me before I'm gone - Gladiator frog t-shirts
Love me before I'm gone - Gladiator frog
Licking this frog may make you crazy t-shirts
Licking this frog may make you crazy



MONGABAY.COM
Mongabay.com seeks to raise interest in and appreciation of wild lands and wildlife, while examining the impact of emerging trends in climate, technology, economics, and finance on conservation and development (more)

CONTENTS
Rainforests
Tropical Fish
News
Madagascar
Pictures
Kids' Site
Languages
TCS Journal
About
Archives
Topics | RSS
Newsletter



WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
Email:


INTERACT
Facebook
Contact
Twitter
Interns
Photo Store
Help


SUPPORT
Help support mongabay.com when you buy from Amazon.com



POPULAR PAGES
Rainforests
Rain forests
Amazon deforestation
Deforestation
Deforestation stats
Why rainforests matter
Saving rainforests
Deforestation stats
Rainforest canopy

News
Most popular articles
Worth saving?
Forest conservation
Earth Day
Poverty alleviation
Cell phones in Africa
Seniors helping Africa
Saving orangutans in Borneo
Palm oil
Amazon palm oil
Future of the Amazon
Cane toads
Dubai environment
Investing to save rainforests
Visiting the rainforest
Defaunation
Blue lizard
Amazon fires
Extinction debate
Extinction crisis
Malaysian palm oil
Borneo

News topics
Amazon
Biofuels
Brazil
Carbon Finance
Climate Change
Deforestation
Energy
Happy-upbeat
Interviews
Oceans
Palm oil
Rainforests
Solutions
Wildlife
MORE TOPICS




STORE

SHIRTS
HIGH RESOLUTION PHOTOS / PRINTS


CALENDARS
  • Mount Kenya
  • East Africa Safari Wildlife
  • Kenya's Turkana People
  • Peru
  • African Wildlife
  • Alaska
  • China
  • Madagascar Chameleons


    CANVAS BAGS

  • Hallucinogenic frog bag
  • Madagascar wildlife bag






  • Key REDD Posts

    In light of the UNFCCC meeting in Copenhagen, below are some recent important posts on REDD

  • Changing drivers of deforestation provides new opportunities for conservation (12/08/2009)
  • Brazilian tribe owns carbon rights to Amazon rainforest land (12/08/2009)
  • Primer: Destruction of old-growth forests looms over climate talks (12/08/2009)
  • Brazil could halt Amazon deforestation within a decade (12/03/2009)
  • Cheap REDD isn't the best conservation strategy for biodiversity (12/03/2009)
  • In absence of measures to address consumption, REDD may fail to protect forests (12/02/2009)
  • Brazil to push for 10% limit on REDD carbon offsets (12/02/2009)
  • Ethnographic maps built using cutting-edge technology may help Amazon tribes win forest carbon payments (11/29/2009)
  • Ecological benefits of REDD boosted by inclusion of private landowners, potentially harmed by plantations (11/17/2009)
  • Emissions from deforestation overestimated; 12% rather than 17% (11/04/2009)
  • Without reinstatement of key provision, REDD could subsidize large-scale forest destruction (11/02/2009)
  • Curtailing tropical deforestation vital to U.S. interests (10/08/2009)
  • Prince Charles making progress in effort to save rainforests, says leading British environmentalist (09/22/2009)
  • Concerns over deforestation may drive new approach to cattle ranching in the Amazon (09/08/2009)
  • Limit palm oil development to lands that store less than 40 tons of carbon/ha - study (08/06/2009)
  • Are we on the brink of saving rainforests? (07/22/2009)
  • Palm oil companies trade plantation concessions for carbon credits from forest conservation (07/22/2009)
  • Indonesia releases revenue sharing rules for REDD forest carbon projects (07/13/2009)
  • Big REDD (07/08/2009)
  • A New Idea to Save Tropical Forests Takes Flight (06/29/2009)
  • Fate of world's rainforests likely to be determined in next 2 years (06/19/2009)
  • Amazon deforestation doesn't make communities richer, better educated, or healthier (06/11/2009)
  • Climate pact must halt deforestation and industrial logging of old-growth forests, exclude carbon credits for forest conservation, say activists (06/09/2009)
  • Brazil's plan to save the Amazon rainforest (06/02/2009)
  • Excluding forest carbon from climate policy will spur massive deforestation (05/28/2009)
  • Indigenous people serve as guardians of forest carbon, must be involved in climate solutions (04/22/2009)
  • Avoided deforestation projects highly desirable for carbon offsets finds survey (04/21/2009)
  • How satellites are used in conservation (04/13/2009)
  • Can carbon credits from REDD compete with palm oil? (03/30/2009)
  • Norway emerges as champion of rainforest conservation (03/19/2009)
  • 37,000 sq km of Amazon rainforest destroyed or damaged in 2008 (03/19/2009)
  • Pricing emissions from farming, logging could shift land use towards conservation (02/15/2009)
  • Kerry, Lugar: U.S. has opportunity to lead on climate, forest conservation (02/10/2009)
  • Guidelines on how to establish an avoided deforestation project (01/22/2009)
  • How to save the Amazon rainforest (01/04/2009)
  • New standards ensure forest carbon projects protect indigenous people, biodiversity (12/08/2008)
  • Carbon conservation schemes will fail without forest people (10/16/2008)
  • UK government: rainforests are weapon against global warming (10/15/2008)
  • Biofuels 200 times more expensive than forest conservation for global warming mitigation (08/27/2008)
  • Markets could save rainforests: an interview with Andrew Mitchell (08/17/2008)
  • Investors seek profit from conserving rainforest biodiversity (08/13/2008)
  • Carbon tax will ease transition to sensible climate policy (08/13/2008)
  • Investing to save rainforests (04/02/2008)
  • Shift from poverty-driven to industry-driven deforestation may help conservation (08/06/2008)

    More REDD articles

    DEFORESTATION DATA

  • Country statistics
  • Deforestation charts
  • Primer on deforestation
  • Deforestation photos
  • Deforestation info for kids




  • Copyright mongabay 2009