US authorities recover three species from ‘endangered’ list According to a US wildlife conservation agency, long-nosed bat and gypsum wild buckwheat and Kuenzler hedgehog cactus are removed from the list of endangered species. The bat, buckwheat and cactus are all found in the Southwest, a hotspot of biodiversity and a locus for habitat protection and other measures undertaken
under the US Endangered Species Act for a host of species. 32 species have fully or partially recovered while another 12 have been proposed as recovered. 11 species were found to have recovered in 2016, including a Texas plant four subspecies of island foxes from the Channel Islands, two humpback whale populations, Kentucky’s white-haired goldenrod, Santa Cruz cypress and Columbian white-tailed deer.
Four species were proposed for downlisting or delisting, including black-capped vireos, Yellowstone grizzly bears, Florida manatees and Texas’ Tobusch fishhook cactus. This year a California plant, the Hidden Lake bluecurls, was also found to be recovered and proposed for delisting.
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