Two crayfish that have
died out throughout much of their range in Appalachia may have some hope. The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has proposed to protect the two species under
the Endangered Species Act.
More
than half of their habitats of the Big Sandy crayfish and the Guyandotte River
crayfish have become too polluted, mostly from mountaintop removal coal mining,
for these creatures to live in. The proposed protection by the Fish and
Wildlife Service is in response to a petition and a lawsuit brought by the
Center for Biological Diversity.
Big Sandy crayfish photo: Guenter Schuster |
Though
the evidence that mountaintop removal causes ecological damage has been
mounting, and the health hazards to people because of mountaintop mining have
become more evident, this is the first news that I’ve run across that any
legislators or government agency is doing anything to mitigate the harm that
this mining practice inflicts on the people or land of Appalachia.
You
can read more about the proposed listing in the press release from the Center
for Biological Diversity.
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