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Press & Media

Xerces Society staff are respected as reliable sources of science-based advice at the forefront of invertebrate protection, and can provide information and perspective on all aspects of invertebrate conservation.

Our team includes nationally recognized experts on a range of issues, including insect declines, protecting endangered species, climate change impacts, pollinator conservation, pesticide risk, habitat creation, and wildlife gardening. We work to understand and protect insects and other invertebrates in all landscapes, from wildlands to backyards.

In each of the last three years, Xerces staff were quoted or our work was mentioned in thousands of media articles that reached over one billion people worldwide.

We’re happy to give media interviews. Please direct all inquiries to Deborah Seiler, (503) 232-6639 or [email protected]

For general information about our work, please see our blog, publications, and other information on our website. Follow us on social media for the latest updates, as well.


Recent Press Releases

Tras los esfuerzos de cientos de voluntarios y socios por contar las mariposas monarca que invernan en California, el 28.º Conteo Anual de Mariposas Monarca Occidentales registró una población máxima de tan solo aproximadamente 9,119 mariposas este invierno. Esta es la segunda población de mariposas monarca en invernación más baja registrada desde que se comenzó a dar seguimiento, en 1997.
Following proposed monarch listing, Earthjustice and Xerces petition EPA to upgrade risk assessment data for pesticides.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has proposed to list the monarch butterfly as a threatened species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act, as announced today in the Federal Register.
Responding to a petition from the Xerces Society and Center for Biological Diversity, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will propose to list the Bethany Beach firefly as a threatened species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act on October 1, as announced today in the advance Federal Register.
The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation and the Center for Biological Diversity won a lawsuit today against the federal Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service over its program allowing insecticide spraying to kill native grasshoppers and crickets on millions of acres in 17 western states. An Oregon federal court judge found that APHIS violated the law by focusing only on spraying insecticides to suppress grasshoppers and Mormon crickets, and that the agency “ignores any pest management techniques other than the application of pesticides.”