The quest to gain protected status for the salamander that is Pennsylvania’s official state amphibian has been a lengthy journey, beginning in April 2010 when the center first petitioned the service to add the hellbender to the endangered species list.
“It’s, unfortunately, not uncommon for petitions … to not result in the protection of species for a decade,” said Brian Segee, who, as the center’s senior attorney, serves as the hellbender’s legal counsel. “Many species have gone extinct while waiting for action.”
The hellbender – so named, it is said, by early American settlers who described it as “a creature from hell where it’s bent on returning” – is the largest salamander in North America. Its lineage goes back 65 million years, to the time of the dinosaurs. It survived the cataclysm that killed the dinosaurs and the Ice Age, and now, because of human beings, it is in danger of extinction in the Information Age.
Conservationists sue for endangered status for the hellbender
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Conservationists sue for endangered status for the hellbender
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Hell-bent for Hellbenders: The canary in the coal mine of the Susquehanna River watershed
Just about every ecological challenge facing the Susquehanna River watershed affects the Eastern Hellbender. Peter Petokas is trying to save them.
Mike Argento, York Daily Record
Published
2:23 pm UTC Feb. 3, 2021
Just about every ecological challenge facing the Susquehanna River watershed affects the Eastern Hellbender. Peter Petokas is trying to save them.
Mike Argento, York Daily Record
Published
2:23 pm UTC Feb. 3, 2021
This USA Today Network special report explores solutions to deep threats that flow through New York, Pennsylvania and Maryland as the Susquehanna River feeds the Chesapeake Bay with life and death.