We’re working to pass the Wildlife Corridors 保护 Act, legislation that provides the funding and coordination of government agencies needed to connect fractured habitats.
We share our planet with countless incredible creatures, from the grizzly on the ridgeline to the bee in the meadow, from the wolf in the forest to the butterfly in our backyard. 许多物种已经濒临灭绝. It’s up to us to protect endangered species and the habitats they call home.
A United Nations report from 2019 warns that 1 million plant and animal species worldwide could go extinct within decades — due largely to human activity.
We need a wide range of tools to protect vulnerable species and their habitats. The best tool in the United States is the Endangered Species Act (ESA), which has a 99% success rate in keeping species under its protection from becoming extinct. The ESA has brought back from the brink of extinction the bald eagle, 灰熊, 加州秃鹫, 美国鳄鱼, 座头鲸, 佛罗里达海牛等等.
But four years of short-sighted executive orders from the Trump administration 削弱了欧洲航天局 and targeted animals’ habitats with 扩大了在北极的钻探, logging in the Tongass National Forest,更多的.

As a first step, we’re working to bring the Endangered Species Act back to full strength. We are calling on the Biden administration and Congress to restore the Act.
在长期的, we need to strengthen the ESA to include protections that kick in when a species’ numbers begin to fall, rather than waiting until their very survival is threatened to act.
在ESA之外, we need to reconnect natural areas that have been disconnected by roads, 栅栏和其他人为的障碍物. 具体地说, we need to promote the expansion of wildlife corridors through our support of the bipartisan Wildlife Corridors 保护 Act. We must also stop proposals that threaten America’s wild places, which are not only worth protecting for their own sake but are also important habitats. That’s why we’re working to stop plans to drill for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, 哪里有北极熊和驯鹿出没, and block plans to log the untamed roadless areas of the Tongass National Forest, 这里的树木比美国的还要古老.

At a time when we’re running short on nature, we need to do everything we can to protect it. The call of a bird in the wild or the rustling of an antelope in the brush is priceless — worth far more than the minerals we could extract or the high-rise condo we could develop.
We need to protect our natural world. We can accomplish all of this by convincing our fellow Americans that we should no longer tolerate sacrificing nature for a little more oil, timber or other economic productions.