logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
              
logo 11/23/2024 11:00:04 PM     
Tiny Fish at Center of 1970s Supreme Court Case Achieves Redemption 
By Monisha Ravisetti US Source: cnet 10/6/2022
Monisha Ravisetti
Credit: USFWS
In 1978, the US Supreme Court made a decision that would go down as a turning point for environmental law. It was all because of a tiny fish: the snail darter.

Earlier in the decade, this wispy, brown wriggly creature was the main reason federal officials had to stop building an expensive dam across the Little Tennessee River, a narrow body of water flowing between Georgia, North Carolina and its namesake state. The snail darter, listed as an endangered species since 1975, lived in that river.
 

Presumably, only in that river.

Therefore, constructing a dam across this animal's rare habitat, environmentalists argued while invoking rights of 1973's Endangered Species Act, risked putting an already vulnerable population under even more survival pressure. On the other hand, the Tennessee Valley Authority wanted to finish the dam it'd already invested about $100 million in, suggesting the river would simply flood without a sturdy structure.

 
Little Tennessee River Darter, Snail Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3301Из-за чего цены на щучью икру в Астрахани взлетели? Рыболовство2021-06-01RU
3302Куда пошла рыба, которую не смогли экспортировать в АТР?korabel2021-12-29RU
3303Warmer, oxygen-poor waters threaten world’s ‘most heavily exploited’ fishmongabay2022-01-06PE
3304Tiny but mighty important: What a small fish can tell you about the health of our riversnewschannel92022-01-07US
3305Australian writer seeks information on Texarkana falling fish phenomenontexarkanagazette2022-01-08AU
3306Mississippi fishermen find themselves caught after agents say they were over limit by 152 fishmagnoliastatelive2022-01-09US
3307Four swimmers are found dead and covered in bites after spate of terrifying PIRANHA attacks in Paraguaydailymail2022-01-06PY
3308Indonesia aims for sustainable fish farming with ‘aquaculture villages’mongabay2022-01-07ID
3309Alaskan fishers intercepting B.C. salmon at 'jarring' ratedelta-optimist2022-01-11US
3310So you caught a fish in Kansas, is it safe to eat?KSNW2022-01-03US
3311An 'amazing week': Idaho Fish & Game researchers hook three 10-foot sturgeonktvb72022-01-04US
3312Sustainable fishing by 2025: What is the current situation in Indonesia?dw2022-01-10ID
3313In Norway, Kids Slice Out Cod Tongues for Serious Moneysmithsonianmag2022-01-12NO
3314After 33 years, Fish Radio's Laine Welch hangs up her micKDLG 670AM2022-01-08US
3315Spanish Party Calls for Demolition of Morocco’s Fish Farm Near Chafarinas Islandsmoroccoworldnews2022-01-03MA
3316Tribe works to keep home of endangered fish free of invasive speciesnevadacurrent2022-01-03US
3317Local fisherman reels in possible world record haul off coast of St. Augustinenews4jax2021-12-28US
3318Biodiversity: The tale of the 'un-extinct' fishbbc2021-12-29MX
3319Delta pumps throttled back despite rains, cutting California water deliveries to protect fishsacbee2022-01-01US
3320Fish fall from the sky during rain in east Texas, city reactskxxv2022-01-04US
3321Israeli scientists train goldfish to steer car around roomtimesofisrael2022-01-03IL
3322Removing barriers to fish passagenewportnewstimes2021-12-29US
3323Seawatch: Alaska had a tumultuous fishing yearHomer News2021-12-29US
3324Ice Age Canadian Lakesearthobservatory2022-01-21CA
3325Jordan orders gates opened on Avon River to allow fish passagesaltwire2021-03-23CA

133 134 135 132 of [136 - pages.]