Rio Grande petition seeks federal protections for fish
Environmentalists say at least two similar species have gone extinct in the past century
Acting Director of the Office of Management Russell Vought discusses how President Trump's new environmental rules to expedite stalled infrastructure projects will be a net benefit to the public.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Environmentalists are asking federal wildlife managers to used the Endangered Species Act to protect a fish found only in the Rio Grande in Texas and the Pecos River in New Mexico.
WildEarth Guardians filed the petition with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Tuesday, saying it is part of a campaign focused on vulnerable species found in rivers and streams across the West.
FLORIDA FLOODING COULD DEVALUE REAL ESTATE
The group contends the Rio Grande shiner is one of the aquatic and riparian species that will not survive into the next century without a significant change in the way rivers are managed.
A person fishes in the Rio Grande river in Laredo, Texas. (Matthew Busch/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
A small freshwater fish, the shiner once inhabited the Rio Grande throughout New Mexico and Texas and the Pecos River as far north as Santa Rosa, New Mexico. The species has completely vanished from the Rio Grande in New Mexico and from large portions of the Rio Grande along the Texas-Mexico border.
Environmentalists say at least two similar species — the phantom shiner and the Rio Grande bluntnose shiner — have gone extinct in the past century.