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Ivory-billed woodpecker (Getty Images) |
- The ivory-billed woodpecker, one North America's largest woodpecker, which brought much-needed tourism to rural Arkansas.
- The San Marcos gambusia, a tiny fish in Central Texas killed off from dry weather, pesticide runoff, and factory pollution.
- Bachman's warbler, a songbird that once lived in the Southeastern U.S. but fell prey to habitat destruction.
- A catfish species native to Ohio, thought to be highly intolerant of water pollution.
- Eight freshwater mussels. It's not known why they went extinct, but freshwater mussels are among the most-endangered species in North America, possibly because of habitat destruction or disease.
- Eight Hawaiian bird species due to invasive predators.
The announcement offers a possible "glimpse of the future. It comes amid a worsening global biodiversity crisis that threatens a million species with extinction, many within decades," Einhorn reports. "Human activities like farming, logging, mining and damming take habitat from animals and pollute much of what’s left. People poach and overfish. Climate change adds new peril."
Starting today, FWS will accept public comments on the proposal for 60 days before making a final ruling.
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/39Q5HuX 23 species to be declared extinct, including woodpecker that brought much-needed tourism to rural Arkansas - Entrepreneur Generations
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