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Friday, December 19, 2025

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IN Gov. says redistricting won't return in 2026 legislative session; MN labor advocates speaking out on immigrants' rights; report outlines ways to reduce OH incarceration rate; President Donald Trump reclassifies marijuana; new program provides glasses to visually impaired Virginians; Line 5 pipeline fight continues in Midwest states; and NY endangered species face critical threat from Congress.

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Legal fights over free speech, federal power, and public accountability take center stage as courts, campuses and communities confront the reach of government authority.

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States are waiting to hear how much money they'll get from the Rural Health Transformation Program, the DHS is incentivizing local law enforcement to join the federal immigration crackdown and Texas is creating its own Appalachian Trail.

Report: Document Mussels, Other Invertebrate Species Before They Go Extinct

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Friday, January 28, 2022   

New research suggests Earth's Sixth Mass Extinction event, on par with the one which ended the age of dinosaurs, is already under way.

Noah Greenwald, endangered species director at the Center for Biological Diversity, said the recent findings add to a growing pile of troubling news, including projections of more than a million species likely to be lost in coming decades due to human activity.

Habitat loss because of human development is seen as a major driver, with climate change acting as an increasingly potent accelerant as fossil fuels continue to burn.

"Because of all the changes that people are causing on the planet, species are now going extinct much, much, much faster," Greenwald explained. "That should be a cause for concern. I mean, essentially, we are fouling our own nest."

Some scientists say the rate of species loss is similar to the "background rate of extinction," which is what should normally be happening as a result of regular evolution, but the study noted the contemporary rate is 100 to 1,000 times that.

Scientists studied extinction rates for invertebrate species including snails, clams and slugs, in part because vertebrate species such as birds and mammals received the lion's share of attention in the past.

Greenwald pointed out when humans pollute and dam rivers, it really impacts those species.

"One of the groups in North America that's the most at risk of extinction is mussels," Greenwald noted. "They clean our rivers; they're filter feeders, and so they help to keep rivers clean. As we lose them, we lose that function to clean out our rivers."

New Hampshire has at least two types of endangered mussels, the dwarf wedgemussel and the brook floater mussel. And the eastern pondmussel is threatened, according to the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department.

Researchers called for biologists to collect and document as many species as possible before they disappear.


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