Florida News Connection
By: Trimmel Gomes
Wildlife experts are spotlighting the Rice's
whale, which was classified as its own species in 2021, as one of many reasons
to preserve the Endangered Species Act on
its 50th anniversary.
Since it was signed into law in 1973, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said
the act has been one of the world's most important conservation laws. Experts
said the decades of work done to preserve various wildlife is needed for the
recently identified and endangered Rice's whale, the only
baleen whale making the Gulf of Mexico its full-time home, just 60 miles
offshore from Pensacola.
Jane Davenport, senior attorney for Defenders of Wildlife, said thanks to the
act, scientists can work to secure critical habitat to
preserve the fewer than 100 Rice's whales remaining.
"We are not going to let species like the Rice's whale go extinct,"
Davenport vowed. "It's just a really exciting development but also a
cautionary tale that we can't let these species slip through our fingers
without doing everything possible to save them."
Rep. Garret Graves, R-Louisiana is leading legislation, House Resolution 6008,
to restrict the Rice's whale's designated habitat, claiming in a statement, "to
confront the Biden administration's most recent effort to restrict American
energy production in the Gulf of Mexico."
Davenport called Graves' legislation a "Graves mistake" for
undermining the "country's bedrock wildlife protection laws." She
pointed out protecting endangered wildlife does not have to be a
one-or-the-other type choice.
"We can either have oil and gas or we can have large whales. We can either
have military training exercises or we can have whales. We can either have
commercial fishing and recreational boating or we can have whales,"
Davenport outlined their opponents' position. "That's just a false
dichotomy, and on all of those fronts."
The fossil fuel industry opposes measures such as slowing ship speeds in
critical whale habitat and excluding the habitat from oil and gas extraction.
The affected habitat, located along the continental shelf break, constitutes
only about 8% of the total acres available for leasing.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service. Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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