For Immediate Release, March 13, 2025
Contact: |
Elise Bennett, Center for Biological Diversity, (727) 755-6950, [email protected] |
Lawsuit Seeks to Protect 11 South Florida Species
Snakes, Lizards, Plants at Risk From Sea-Level Rise, Development
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— The Center for Biological Diversity, represented by the Jacobs Public Interest Law Clinic for Democracy and the Environment at Stetson University College of Law, sued the Trump administration today for delaying Endangered Species Act protection for a lizard, two snakes and eight plants found in South Florida.
The 11 imperiled South Florida species face extinction-level threats from habitat-destroying development and sea-level rise, which continue to close in on the few remaining places they call home. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed granting urgently needed protections for the animals and plants but missed the mandatory deadlines to finalize those protections.
Beginning Jan. 20 the Trump administration implemented a sweeping regulatory freeze on all rulemakings across the government. Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum also directed all agencies within the department to identify and eliminate existing regulations before any new regulations could be issued, including those needed by threatened and endangered species.
On Feb. 14, following the directives of the Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency, approximately 420 staff were fired from the Service, including staff working to protect and list threatened and endangered species.
Today’s lawsuit was filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
“These rare creatures called Florida home eons before Trump and his minions were born, and they need strong endangered species protections now if they’re going to survive,” said Elise Bennett, Florida and Caribbean director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “We can’t allow the Trump administration to further delay lifesaving protections by cutting off conservation funding and firing the public servants committed to ensuring a future for our wildlife and wild places.”
“South Florida is home to some truly remarkable plants and animals — quirky, captivating and irreplaceable, but time is running out,” said Jaclyn Lopez, director of the Jacobs Law Clinic for Democracy and the Environment at Stetson University College of Law. “This is an ‘all hands on deck’ moment where we must act quickly to save what is left of wild Florida.”
In September 2022 the Service proposed protecting the Florida Keys mole skink, a smooth, shiny lizard with a bright pink tail, as threatened and also proposed designating 7,068 acres of protected critical habitat. Rapid and intense shifts in climate, development and associated human activities threaten the rare lizard’s survival.
In October 2022 the Service proposed to protect two small, nonvenomous snakes — the Key ring-necked snake and Rim Rock crowned snake — as endangered and to protect 2,604 acres and 5,972 acres of critical habitat for the snakes, respectively. Recognizing existential threats from urban sprawl and sea-level rise fueled by climate change, the Service projected that virtually no habitat for either species will remain in the lower Florida Keys by 2080.
Also in October 2022 the Service proposed to protect 179,680 acres of critical habitat for the Everglades bully, 177,879 acres for the Florida pineland crabgrass, 8,867 acres for the pineland sandmat and 179,300 acres for the Florida prairie clover in Monroe, Collier and Miami-Dade counties.
In a separate decision, the Service proposed to protect 1,462 acres for the Big Pine partridge pea and 1,379 acres for the wedge spurge in Monroe County, as well as 5,090 acres for the sand flax, and 16,635 acres for the Blodgett’s silverbush in Miami-Dade and Monroe counties.
All eight plants can be found in the few remaining pockets of pine rockland habitats, which have been reduced by at least 98% over recent decades.
The Endangered Species Act prohibits federal agencies from authorizing activities that will destroy or harm a protected species’ critical habitat. Species with federally protected critical habitat are more than twice as likely to be recovering as species without it.
Species Highlights
Florida Keys mole skink: Adorned with a bright-pink tail, the Florida Keys mole skink lives along shorelines in the Florida Keys. These reptiles burrow in dry sand and hunt insects under leaves, debris and washed-up vegetation on beaches. Accelerating sea-level rise and storms of increasing intensity threaten to inundate the skink’s remaining coastal habitat. Because the animals survive in only a few populations across a small geographic area, a single major storm could wipe out the whole subspecies. Urban sprawl is also squeezing the skinks into increasingly smaller areas, while exposing them to threats from pollution, traffic and feral animals. Following a Center petition in 2010 and a legal victory in 2020, the Service proposed to protect this skink as a threatened species in 2022.
Key ring-necked snake: Small and nonvenomous, the Key ring-necked snake grows to be approximately 6 inches long. They have a slate gray back with a surprisingly bright yellow to red belly and a muted or entirely missing orange neck ring. The Key ring-necked lives only in the Florida Keys. Following a Center petition in 2012 and a legal victory in 2022, the Service proposed to protect the snake in 2022.
Rim Rock crowned snake: Named after the Miami Rim Rock geological formation, the small, nonvenomous Rim Rock crowned snake grows up to 10 inches long. These snakes live in critically endangered pine rockland and tropical hardwood forests around Miami and the Florida Keys, where they can be found hiding in holes and depressions in limestone rock. Following a Center petition in 2012 and a legal victory in 2022, the Service proposed to protect the snake in 2022.
Big Pine partridge pea: The Big Pine partridge pea is a small shrub with five-petal, yellow flowers and pea-shaped fruit. They’re found only in the pine rocklands of the lower Florida Keys. The peas used to live in Big Pine Key, No Name Key, Ramrod Key, Cudjoe Key and Sugarloaf Key, but are now only found on Big Pine Key and Cudjoe Key.
Blodgett’s silverbush: The Blodgett’s silverbush is a woody shrub with small, green flowers. These shrubs grow in the pine rocklands of Monroe and Miami-Dade counties but have become increasingly rare.
Everglades bully: The Everglades bully is a shrub with spiny branches, oval leaves with fuzzy undersides and clusters of small, white flowers. It has been a candidate for protection since 2004. The shrub is native to Miami-Dade County and is only found in pine rocklands.
Florida pineland crabgrass: The Florida pineland crabgrass is also known as Everglades grass or twospike crabgrass. The crabgrass species occurs in the Everglades in Miami-Dade and Monroe counties. The crabgrass was first identified as needing endangered species protection in 1975. The Center petitioned the Service to protect them in 2004.
Florida prairie clover: The Florida prairie clover had been waiting on the Service’s candidate list for federal protection since 1999. The clover is a member of the pea family and grows up to 6 feet tall in pine rocklands and coastal uplands.
Pineland sandmat: The pineland sandmat had been a candidate for protection since 1999. Also known as the pineland deltoid spurge, rockland spurge and wedge sandmat, the sandmat is a beautiful perennial herb with a red stem and delicate, yellow flowers.
Sand flax: The sand flax is a small, perennial herb with yellow, buttercup-looking flowers. The sand flax is found in pine rocklands in Monroe and Miami-Dade counties, and the populations are declining.
Wedge spurge: The wedge spurge is a small, perennial herb with slender stems and a silvery appearance. The wedge spurge occurs in pine rocklands and roadsides on Big Pine Key, where the population is declining.
The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.7 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.
Recognizing that the health of our environment and of our communities are inextricably linked, and entirely dependent on a functioning and just democracy, the Jacobs Law Clinic pursues and defends justice through advocacy focused on Florida’s most pressing environmental issues.