VenomLand
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.



 
HomePortalGalleryLatest imagesRegisterLog in
Please beware, to register at venomland you are requested to use your full name (first and family name) - nicknames are not allowed and will be not activated! thx

Dear Venomland Members and Friends, Venomland is a little more than 6 years old now and by far the biggest Hot Snake community on the Planet! We want to thank all of you who made Venomland the leading Board. We are also very thankful to our Moderators and Admins for years of hard work. Now, it is time to move on. I have been thinking how to proceed and what to do with our beloved board as we reach a size, that we need to make drastic changes to secure the future of our community. As of now, Venomland is hosted by a free (well mostly free) hosting service. That was good for the first years but now we need to find a new way to run our forum. I have spend hundreds of Dollars over the years to keep Venomland up and running, and i have done so with pleasure. Now, we need your help! We need to come up with several thousand dollars for our Venomland 2.0 project, which i frankly cant pay for any longer by myself. So Venomland is asking his Friends and Members for the first time for their financial Support. Please help to keep Venomland alive, and let us move on to a new, better Portal in the Future! Every Dollar is helping us a great deal. I know, its hard times for everyone, but please spare a few Dollar for our community. If you have only 10 Dollars to spare, we are grateful, if it is more, it would be awesome. We are planning to develop a very new Venomland, with real community functions, a forum like you are already loving it and a real (online) Hot Snake Magazin. Also, there will be download areas for scientific papers, Wallpapers and more. Again folks, we can only do that if you all help. Please send me a Private Message if you want to keep Venomland alive, i will provide you with the details on how to donate Money. For now, we can accept money from creditcards via skrill (please google it, its a free service - account-details will be forwarded to you) and paypal. All the best, and for a (hopefully) nice future of our Board. Mario

 

 New Report Lists Top 10 U.S. Species in Need of Immediate Protection

Go down 
AuthorMessage
Mario Lutz
Lord of the Serpents
Lord of the Serpents
Mario Lutz


Male
Number of posts : 1416
Age : 56
Location : Puerto Galera, Philippines
Points : 8200
Registration date : 2008-03-06

New Report Lists Top 10 U.S. Species in Need of Immediate Protection Empty
PostSubject: New Report Lists Top 10 U.S. Species in Need of Immediate Protection   New Report Lists Top 10 U.S. Species in Need of Immediate Protection Icon_minitimeTue 6 Jan - 4:00

Press Release, December 16, 2008, From Defenders of Wildlife and Endangered Species Coalition

Washington DC ˆ Ten species have been named the most in-need of protection under the Endangered Species Act in a report released today by the Endangered Species Coalition. The report, „Without a Net: Top Ten Wildlife, Fish and Plants in Need of Endangered Species Act Protection, demonstrates the grave problem in the current implementation of the Endangered Species Act˜a listing program that has been crippled.

The report includes ten species plus three honorable mentions that are in danger of extinction, but are not protected under the Endangered Species Act.

„The Endangered Species Act is our nation's safety net for the wildlife, fish and plants at risk of disappearing forever," said Leda Huta, executive director of the Endangered Species Coalition. „Sadly, too many species are being left without the Act's protections."

The first step to implementing the Endangered Species Act is to place an animal, plant or fish on the „endangered species list." Yet some species wait to get on the list for years. Under the Bush administration, listings have greatly decreased˜accounting for the lowest per year listing average of any president in the history of the Endangered Species Act. Now there are hundreds of species on and off the „candidate list," that are in jeopardy and are waiting to be officially recognized as endangered.

"If there were ever a list you wouldn't want to be on, this list of imperiled species is it," said Jamie Rappaport Clark, the executive vice president of Defenders of Wildlife and a member of the judging panel. "Hopefully, for these imperiled species and the hundreds of others that have been neglected over the last eight years, this recognition will help them receive the protections they urgently need."

The wildlife, fish and plants considered for the report were nominated by conservation and environmental organizations from around the country. A panel of scientists and policy experts selected the final ten featured, as well as three honorable mentions.

The Endangered Species Act has been successful in its mission to prevent species from going extinct. It is incredibly rare for a „listed‰ species to go extinct. Therefore, many of the country‚s most imperiled species are those that are in danger of extinction, but not yet on the list. Without the full implementation of the Endangered Species Act, they won‚t receive federal protections.

„We must help all of the species nominated for this report ˆ and hundreds of others ˆto avoid their extinction, even though they are not yet on the Endangered Species List. Some of these species are jeopardized by the bad behavior of political appointees, while some face the daunting prospect of global warming," stated Huta. „Our leaders must renew our country‚s commitment to protecting all wildlife, fish and plants in danger of extinction."

In January, the listing program becomes the domain of a new Secretary of the Interior, widely reported earlier today to likely be Senator Ken Salazar (D-Co). The environmental community has high hopes that the Obama administration will get the implementation of the listing program and the Endangered Species Act back on track.

"This report comes at a critical time," said Greg Butcher, director of bird conservation for National Audubon Society and another member of the judging panel. „After years of neglect for too many imperiled species, we are hopeful the incoming administration and Congress will reverse course and take a more balanced and science-based approach toward conservation. Our best tool will be a reinvigorated Endangered Species Act."

Herps Listed

Boreal Toad, southern Rocky Mountain population
Location: Colorado and Utah
Media Contact: Erin Robertson, Center for Native Ecosystems, 303.546.0214 & Noah Greenwald, Center for Biological Diversity, 503.484.7495

Wood Turtle
Location: Great Lakes and Northeastern States, Virginia and West Virginia
Media Contact: Steven Krichbaum, Wild Virginia, 540.886.1584

And on Honorable Mention List
and Dune Lizard
Location: New Mexico and Texas
Media Contact: Nicole Rosmarino, WildEarth Guardians, 505.699.7404

For more information contact on the report on other species: Contact: Leda Huta, Executive Director: 202-320-6467, Jon Hunter, Policy Director: 202-476-0669

The full report, which includes information on each species and a list of ten solutions, is available online at www.StopExtinction.org .
Back to top Go down
http://www.venomland.org
 
New Report Lists Top 10 U.S. Species in Need of Immediate Protection
Back to top 
Page 1 of 1
 Similar topics
-
» New report finds millions of marine turtles killed by fisheries, not thousands
» CALIFORNIA TIGER SALAMANDER MOVES CLOSER TO PROTECTION UNDER CALIFORNIA
» Protobothrops mangshanensis bite report
» Info Acanthophis bite report in Australia
» Save the Frogs Day 2012 (Report from Sweden)

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
VenomLand :: VenomLand Forum :: News-
Jump to: