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Feds to delay seeking legal protection for monarch butterfly - Medicine Hat NewsMedicine Hat News
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Monarch butterfly legal protections wonât happen any time soon, feds say
Scientists estimate the monarch population in the eastern U.S. has fallen about 80 percent since the mid-1990s.
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Federal officials on Tuesday declared the monarch butterfly âa candidateâ for threatened or endangered status, but said no action would be taken for several years because of the many other species awaiting that designation. [ CAROLYN KASTER | AP ]
Updated Dec. 16, 2020
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. â Federal officials on Tuesday declared the monarch butterfly âa candidateâ for threatened or endangered status, but said no action would be taken for several years because of the many other species awaiting that designation.
John Flesher, Associated Press
Monarch Watch s annual monarch butterfly tagging event is held Saturday, Sept. 19, 2015, on the site of a wetland restoration project on the east side of Clinton Lake.
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. The monarch butterfly will have to wait several years more to receive protection under the Endangered Species Act despite its declining population.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will consider the black-and-orange butterfly, once a common sight in backyard gardens, meadows and other landscapes, a “candidate” for designation as threatened or endangered, officials told The Associated Press ahead of an official announcement Tuesday. But there are other species in line ahead of it.