Xerces Society Joins Scientists, Artists, and Conservationists petition Bush Administration to Place 225 Plants and Animals on Endangered List

The petition includes 28 mollusks, 27 insects, and 8 crustaceans.

A coalition of prominent scientists, artists and environmentalists filed 1,000 pages of legal documents with the Bush administration today, requesting that it cease delaying Endangered Species Act protection for 225 of the nation's most imperiled plants and animals. The species span the country from Hawaii and Washington to Florida, California to New York.

"Wildlife is facing serious threats almost everywhere. In too many places around the world our forests are empty and silent, devoid even of birdsong," said Dr. Jane Goodall of the Goodall Institute. "In the United States, the Endangered Species Act is an effective tool for protecting species. But the current administration and others seek to undermine this important law. Some species have been on the federal waiting list for more than 20 years, and more than 30 species have become extinct or missing while waiting for protection."

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has already declared that all 225 plants and animals qualify as proposed endangered species. Instead of protecting them, however, it has placed them on a waiting list called the "candidate list." A recent report by the Center for Biological Diversity shows that systematic delays, including lengthy waits on the candidate list, contributed to the extinction of 83 species between 1974 and 1994.

Seventy-nine percent of the 225 species (178) have been on the candidate for at least ten years, 38 percent (86) have waited at least 20 years, and 28 percent (64) have been waiting since 1975. On average, the 225 species have been on the waiting list for 17 years.

Among the 225 plants and animals are the Warm Springs zaitzevian riffle beetle, which is only found in one location on Bridger Creek Warm Springs near Bozeman, Montana; the Texas hornshell, which is the last remaining native mussel in New Mexico; and the Camp Shelby burrowing crayfish, a critically imperiled species that only lives in a few pitcher plant bogs in Mississippi.

Also joining the petition are two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and Xerces Society science advisor Dr. E.O. Wilson of Harvard University, National Academy of Sciences member Dr. Paul Ehrlich of Stanford University, Dr. Niles Eldredge of the American Museum of Natural History, National Academy of Sciences member Dr. John Terborgh of Duke University, Society for Conservation Biology founder Dr. Michael Soulé of the University of California at Santa Cruz, and National Medal of Science winner and Xerces Society President Dr. Thomas Eisner of Cornell University.

"Extinction is the most irreversible and tragic of all environmental calamities. With each plant and animal species that disappears, a precious part of creation is callously erased," said Dr. Soulé. "Scientists have studied these species, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has determined that they need the protection of the Endangered Species Act. These plants and animals can be saved if greed and arrogance are subdued by compassion for life and common sense."

Artists include Pulitzer Prize winning novelist Barbara Kingsolver, Lannan Literary Award winning essayist Charles Bowden, former Poet Laureate Robert Hass, and actor Martin Sheen.

"It is too late to save the California grizzly bear, the eastern cougar, the Carolina parakeet, the passenger pigeon, or the silver trout. They became extinct before America created the Endangered Species Act, our modern day Noah's Ark," said Dr. Hass. "But we're not too late to save the 225 plants and animals languishing on the federal candidate list. It's time to open the doors of the ark and let them in. They should be placed on the endangered species list as soon as possible."

Conservation groups included the Center for Biological Diversity, the Xerces Society, and the Biodiversity Conservation Alliance.