-
U.S. officials are proposing to list the tricolored bat as endangered. It's among a dozen bat species across the nation suffering sharp declines because of white-nose syndrome.
-
The U.S. government has begun scattering millions of packets of oral rabies vaccine from helicopters and planes in 13 states to help keep raccoons from spreading their variant of the deadly virus to states where it's less prevalent.
-
After completing the 90-day finding, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined the petition does not present enough scientific information to include a gulch in Santa Cruz County, Arizona in the native fish’s critical habitat.
-
A coalition of environmental groups has filed a lawsuit against the federal government over Mexican gray wolf management. They say new parts of the recovery plan for the endangered animals fail to protect the species in the Southwest.
-
U.S. wildlife managers are being sued over their new recovery plan for the endangered Mexican gray wolf. Environmentalists saying it doesn't go far enough to ensure the species' survival.
-
Wildlife advocates plan to file a lawsuit against the federal government over a new rule for managing endangered Mexican gray wolves in the Southwest.
-
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has finalized a new rule that removes a population cap for endangered Mexican gray wolves in the Southwest.
-
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today announced protections under the Endangered Species Act for a rare wildflower found in Arizona and Mexico. The eryngo is an imperiled wetland plant with only four populations currently identified.
-
A federal judge has given U.S. wildlife officials 18 months to decide if wolverines should be protected under the Endangered Species Act. The move follows years of dispute over how much risk climate change and other threats pose to the rare and elusive predators.
-
U.S. wildlife managers want to see at least 320 Mexican gray wolves roaming the Southwest within the next several years, some environmentalists say that's not enough.