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LAist on MSNThis iconic tortoise in the Mojave Desert is dying out. It could affect the whole ecosystem
The Mojave Desert tortoise has long been considered a threatened species, but in June, California declared it endangered.
Spotting a Mojave Desert tortoise is increasingly difficult in the American Southwest. The tortoises, with their unmistakable ...
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Victorville Daily Press on MSNJob openings announced to protect tortoises in the Mojave Desert Preserve
Looking for a winter job? The Mojave Desert Preserve has announced a limited number of job openings with the goal of ...
Tortoises in the western Mojave Desert have been hardest hit, according to state wildlife officials. Researchers found a 54% reduction in the number of animals there between 2001 and 2020 ...
The tortoise population has declined 50% to 90% in the Mojave Desert due to a wide range of threats, including ravens, coyotes, habitation degradation, disease, being run over by vehicles and ...
In the subsequent three decades, the average the tortoise population has fallen by an average of 1% per year in locations like the Eastern Mojave and Colorado Desert recovery units.
A 3.5-million-acre swath of Mojave Desert, between Ridgecrest and the Morongo Basin, has been named a sentinel landscape, a federally led effort to promote sustainable land-use near military ...
The proposed Rough Hat Clark County Solar Project would take up 2,400 acres of public land in the Pahrump Valley. The area is home to the federally protected desert tortoise.
This area contains the highest density of desert tortoises in the 700-million-acre Colorado Desert and is critical for the species’ recovery, according to state officials.
These intelligent birds have experienced an 800% population boom in the western Mojave Desert over the past 50 years, largely due to something entirely preventable, human trash.
The Mojave desert tortoise is listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. Their population is declining. Holcomb showed FOX5 broken shells from tortoises hit by cars on Nevada roadways.
Both Mojave and Sonoran desert tortoises are protected in Arizona. Since 1988, it has been illegal in the state to harass, kill or trap the reptiles, including capturing them to take home as pets.
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