Endangered Species

Endangered Species

Endangered Species

Protecting endangered species and their habitat is part of the foundational work that the Sierra Club was built around – and it’s working. Today there are more gray wolves, grizzly bears, and California condors than there were a generation ago thanks to Sierra Club members and supporters.



What is the Endangered Species Act?

The Endangered Species Act is one of the most important and effective conservation laws in history. The bipartisan bill passed Congress with almost unanimous support on December 28, 1973, preventing the extinction of roughly 291 species since its passage. Today, more than 80% of the public supports it.

The Endangered Species Act has helped save 99% of species listed for protection from extinction, including the humpback whale, grizzly bear, and bald eagle. Because of its success, gray whales still swim our coasts, peregrine falcons still soar our skies, and polar bears still roam the Arctic tundra. The Act is currently helping protect more than 2,000 species of plants and animals that are threatened or endangered.

The Endangered Species Act is considered one of the greatest success stories of the environmental movement and serves as a model for conservation efforts around the world.

What We Are Doing

Sierra Club is working hard to fight back against attacks to the Endangered Species Act from the Trump Administration and Republicans in Congress. Our chapters and volunteers are also pressuring local decisionmakers to save endangered species, restore keystone species to historic habitats, and protect and connect important habitats so that imperiled wildlife can thrive in the face of climate change and other human-caused threats.

We are leveraging our grassroots power to protect regional species like Florida panthers and grizzly bears in the Northern Rockies. We are also working with Indigenous partners to ensure that Native communities have the resources available to them to manage wildlife on their lands and to restore culturally important species like bison and salmon. In recent years, we have also worked to educate policymakers and the public on how the extinction and climate crises, and the solutions to these crises, are interconnected.

What You Can Do

Victory!

We recently saw a big win for gray wolves in the Northern Rockies. Thanks to legal action by the Sierra Club and partners, Northern Rockies wolves are one step closer to Endangered Species Act protections after a federal judge found the Trump administration's denial unlawful.

April 20, 2020

New Orleans, LA -- Today, environmental groups filed a lawsuit challenging the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (FWS) approval of the massive Annova LNG fracked gas export terminal proposed for southern Texas.

March 16, 2020

Helena, MT— Last week, the Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks Department announced that the U.S. Department of the Interior has approved paintballing by the public to haze grizzly bears, a threatened species protected under the Endangered Species Act.

January 29, 2020

WASHINGTON— A federal judge on Tuesday overturned a decision by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect northern long-eared bats as threatened rather than endangered under the Endangered Species Act.

January 28, 2020

Washington, DC-- Tomorrow (1/29), the House Natural Resources Committee will hold a hearing on several wildlife conservation bills-- including the Protect America’s Wildlife and Fish in Need of Protection Act (PAW and FIN Act) that will undo the…

October 15, 2019

Conservation groups today blasted a U.S. Forest Service decision to authorize continued livestock grazing in the Bridger-Teton National Forest. The forest encompasses the headwaters of the Green River, an area important for grizzly bear recovery and…