The St. Francis Satyr butterfly hasn't disappeared thanks to a U.S. law designed to prevent plants and animals from going extinct. (2/5)pic.twitter.com/cCWdECdULJ
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The St. Francis Satyr butterfly hasn't disappeared thanks to a U.S. law designed to prevent plants and animals from going extinct. (2/5)pic.twitter.com/cCWdECdULJ
The law's successes are great, but there are many fragile species that linger on the endangered list, unable to survive without federal protection. (3/5) http://apne.ws/jOcUWP5
The St. Francis Satyr is found at the Fort Bragg military base, which is also home to the red-cockaded woodpecker. The U.S. government has spent more to protect the woodpecker than the butterfly. (4/5)pic.twitter.com/qH4nth7TjO
“Species will remain in the Endangered Species Act hospital indefinitely," says one conservation expert.
Watch @AP minidoc and tune in Tuesday for the next #WhatCanBeSaved episode. (5/5)http://apne.ws/mhmgggL
Lmao.. just wait til you hear about the Desert Tortoise in 29 Palms, California. Talk about a hardened war vet
its not, bases are all government land. Its common to have protected species on US bases. Yes, it limits training on ranges but we work around it
I always thought nature did it before im sure it can do it again, live that is. Does anyone have a plan to move the human species into a more concentrated community based metro and start giving back to nature some of what take?
Here’s an idea, let’s stop killing other living things. Let’s try saving them,sharing the planet with them & enjoy their beauty as well as what they bring to the environment.Stop killing creatures, trees, oceans & streams & other human beings among other things.#EndangeredSpecies
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