The Center for Biological Diversity says they will continue to seek protections for the animal in the near future.
The anecdote was shared with the Arizona Snake Identification and Questions Facebook group, and has gotten hundreds of comments and reactions. Many admit they wouldn’t have handled it calmly.
Kinley Ragan’s trail camera captured an image of an ocelot, a critically endangered species and the first one spotted in an ...
TUCSON, Ariz.— The Center for Biological Diversity sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today for denying Endangered Species Act protections to the Tucson shovel-nosed snake for a second time. The ...
Arizona and New Mexico waterways now protected for the snakes under the Endangered Species Act include 46 miles of the Gila River, 71 miles of the San Francisco River, 52 miles of the Blue River, 20 ...