Petition denied to reintroduce panthers along Florida-Georgia line
The U.S. Fish and WIldlife Service has denied a petition by environmental groups to reintroduce endangered Florida panthers along the Florida-Georgia line.The petition by the Center for Biological Diversity, Cougar Rewilding Foundation, One More Generation and the Florida Panther Society asks for an "experimental population" of the wildcats in the Okeefenokee National Wildlife Refuge.
An estimated maximum population of 160 panthers is running out of room in Southwest Florida, their last holdout, and a federal plan to save the panther calls for establishing two new populations of at least 240 panthers each.
The decision, outlined in a May 18 letter, will delay the panther's recovery and put it at greater risk of extinction but "will not be the last word," the Center for Biological Diversity said in a statement Friday.
An estimated maximum population of 160 panthers is running out of room in Southwest Florida, their last holdout, and a federal plan to save the panther calls for establishing two new populations of at least 240 panthers each.
The decision, outlined in a May 18 letter, will delay the panther's recovery and put it at greater risk of extinction but "will not be the last word," the Center for Biological Diversity said in a statement Friday.
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