In a court decision this past Friday, a judge ruled that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) lacked a “satisfactory explanation” for not providing habitat protections for the endangered rusty patched bumblebee.
As background, when a species is listed as endangered or threatened, the government issues what’s called a “critical habitat designation” to protect the species home turf, so to speak, and enable it to recover.
But in the case of the rusty patched bumblebee, the Fish and Wildlife Service said that habitat designation would not be “prudent” and argued that pesticides were at fault for the bee’s dramatic decline. And yet it also pointed to habitat loss as an ongoing challenge for the bee’s survival.
After this ruling, let’s hope the agency sees the wisdom of protecting habitat for this important pollinator. And finally, a thank you to the groups that pressed the issue in the courts: NRDC, Center for Biological Diversity and Friends of Minnesota Scientific and Natural Areas.
Together we can protect the wild places that make America special, and stand up for the wildlife that call these places home. You can make the difference.
Will you donate today?