From Kierán Suckling, Center for Biological Diversity <[email protected]>
Subject Hours left this Giving Tuesday - We're counting on you
Date December 3, 2025 1:32 AM
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I want to make sure you saw my emails earlier. This morning, we launched a new lawsuit to secure a future for gray wolves. Hours later, we took legal action to end an industry lawsuit that attempted to hamper the Forest Service's ability to protect endangered species in the Gila Wilderness, the nation's first designated wilderness and one of the Southwest's largest ecologically intact tracts of public land. Our fight for the wild won't slow down.

This is my last message of the day. If you haven't already, please make your matched Giving Tuesday gift now to the Future for the Wild Fund. — Kierán . — Kierán

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Hi John,

Hi Center supporter,

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has given up trying to save gray wolves.

The Endangered Species Act requires a recovery plan for species protected under the Act, but the Service now says wolves don't need one. So today we launched a lawsuit to ensure that gray wolves have a future.

Please make your Giving Tuesday gift now to the Future for the Wild Fund, and it will be matched.

The requirement to develop a national recovery plan for endangered species is critical to a species' survival.

By claiming gray wolves don't need one, the Service is not just violating the Act but paving the way for gray wolves to lose federal protection.

We've been here before; we know what happens next. Wolf hunts will proliferate, and the cruelty shown toward wolves in the northern Rockies will spread nationwide.

But we also know this is a fight we can win, because we've won it before. When gray wolves lost their protection under the first Trump administration, we sued and got those protections restored.

We're ready for that fight again, which is why this morning we let the Service know we'll go to court over its stubborn refusal to help wolves across the lower 48. Today wolves make up only 1% of their historical population.

But wolves are resilient. They can survive, as long as they're protected and given the room to form packs and the safety to thrive.

We fight for wolves and endangered species each and every day. It's at the core of our mission, and we won't stop.

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For the wild,

Kierán Suckling
Executive Director
Center for Biological Diversity

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