Friday, 04 July 2008
Home arrow Florida News arrow Florida to ease manatee, bald eagle protections
InVenice Poll
Do you feel like Local,State and Federal Agencys Care about You and your Family?
Main Menu
Home
My Tube
Local News
Clubs and Organizations
Election 2008
Grass Roots
911 investigations
The Police State
Florida News
Fun Facts :Things to Know
National News
World News
Music News
Forum
Weather
Soap Box
News Feeds
Swanny's Fun Room
Florida Facts: Things to Know
Web Links


Florida to ease manatee, bald eagle protections E-mail
Written by MSNBC   
Friday, 09 June 2006

 

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - The state wildlife commission has voted to take the manatee off Florida’s endangered species list, saying the animal’s population is on the rebound.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission voted unanimously Wednesday to designate the manatee as a threatened species rather than endangered. It also voted to remove the bald eagle from its list of threatened species.

State officials said the decisions would not affect how the species are protected. Both the bald eagle and manatee remain protected under federal law, including the 1973 Endangered Species Act. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service considers the manatee endangered and the bald eagle threatened.

“There will be no less protection,” commission spokesman Henry Cabbage said.

But some environmentalists said the reclassifications could set in motion a downward spiral of state funding and protections.

“As species like the manatee are reclassified to a less imperiled status before their populations have actually recovered, state funding for research, management and law enforcement will likely be directed elsewhere,” said attorney Martha Collins.

Collins represents 17 environmental groups who last week filed a petition with the state seeking to have the entire protection classification system revamped.

The state’s classification system consists of three categories: endangered, threatened and special concern. They are based on a species’ population, how fast it is declining and when extinction is projected, among other factors.

Scientists have said the manatee population is expected to drop 50 percent over the next five decades because of habitat loss, boat collisions and red tide algae. Still, they said the species is not endangered — a classification that denotes species on the brink of extinction.

An annual survey released in February found 3,116 manatees in Florida waters, up from 1,267 in 1991, the first year the census was conducted. But state scientists said the increase shown in the survey is partly a result of better techniques for finding the animals.

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/13226589/

Last Updated ( Friday, 09 June 2006 )
 
< Prev   Next >
Design by Joomlactive
© 2008 invenice.net
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.