Fish & Wildlife Announces Endangered Species Candidates
November 21, 2011 by Land Report Editors
Filed under Feature, Federal Policy, Public Land
In October, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service identified three new candidate species for protection under the Endangered Species Act. They are the bracted twistflower, a Texas flower found primarily in the Austin area; the Poweshiek skipperling (see photo above), a butterfly found in the upper Midwest; and the magnificent ramshorn, a snail found in North Carolina. In addition, three species were removed from the candidate list: the Wekiu bug, which lives atop Hawaii’s Mauna Kea volcano, and the Gila and the New Mexico springsnails.
Click here to download a copy of the November 2011 newsletter.
Preserving Endangered Species for Profit
May 1, 2007 by Joseph Guinto
Filed under Conservation, Field Reporters, Joseph Guinto, Magazine, May 2007, Taxes, Topics
Who can save the Alabama red-bellied turtle? Maybe your accountant can. He or she will have a chance if Congress passes new legislation that would give tax breaks to landowners who act to preserve species like the Alabama red-bellied turtle, one of the creatures considered endangered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Read more












