Wood storks were listed as endangered in 1984, when its population had dropped by over 75 percent—from roughly 20,000 nesting pairs to about 5,000 nesting pairs—primarily due to wetland loss.
The Center and allies first filed a legal petition seeking Endangered Species Act protection for eastern hellbenders in 2010. After a decade of delay and two lawsuits to enforce listing deadlines, in ...
Behind the serene landscapes of Indiana’s wetlands and forests, a high-stakes mission is underway to protect the state’s most ...
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has determined that a petition to list the Olympic marmot under the Endangered Species Act ...
The National Zoo in Washington, D.C., welcomes a female Asian elephant calf, the first of its kind born there in over 25 ...
SmileHub released a report Feb. 18 "to highlight leaders in conservation and inspire greater efforts to protect wildlife.'' ...
The wood stork was once on the brink of extinction and now can be found in 13 counties across Georgia's coast and southern ...
Donations made to the Endangered Resources Fund on your Wisconsin tax form go to conserve rare plants and animals ...
California wildlife officials on Thursday voted to list six small, isolated mountain lion populations as threatened under the ...
WASHINGTON— Two conservation groups, the Center for Biological Diversity and Center for Food Safety, today sued the U.S. Fish ...
A poacher in California uses “an unconventional storage method” for trying to hide her unlawful catch, but a wildlife officer ...