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Earth

Wolverine's survival is in the hands of the law

By Michael Marshall

13 September 2011

Âé¶¹´«Ã½. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

A wolverine waits

(Image: Sergey Gorshkov/naturepl.com)

Survival has been a waiting game for this little critter. In 1994, conservation groups proposed that the wolverine be listed under the Endangered Species Act, but only now is the US government looking into it. That’s thanks to a landmark agreement that could release hundreds of threatened species from bureaucratic limbo.

The US Fish and Wildlife Service has been repeatedly sued by groups including and the , which accuse it of being too slow to make its decisions. The FWS claims the lawsuits and petitions have tied up its resources and hampered its efforts to assess and protect species.

Now it has set out , covering more than 850 species. In return, or they disagree with the decisions, and the CBD has agreed to . An FWS spokesperson said the deal should end the “vicious circle” of missed deadlines and lawsuits. The legally binding agreement was approved on 9 September.

The root of the slow decision-making is a lack of political will, particularly during George W. Bush’s presidency, claims Noah Greenwald of the CBD in Portland, Oregon. This will get the programme going again, he says.

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