Tell NOAA: Protect American Horseshoe Crabs
The Honorable Gina Raimondo, Secretary of Commerce
In May and June, tens-of-thousands of red knots (an imperiled long-distance migratory bird) will make their way to the Atlantic coast where they can refuel on their 9,000 mile journey. This stopover coincides with the horseshoe crab spawning season. The eggs left behind by horseshoe crabs are a crucial food source for red knots--which have declined by more than 94% since the 1980s in some areas of the Atlantic Coast and are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.
Their alarming decline is due in part to the depletion of their critical food source--horseshoe crab eggs. Populations of horseshoe crabs have declined by two-thirds in their largest population, the Delaware Bay.
The decline of horseshoe crabs is caused by multiple factors including use as bait in commercial fisheries and increasing use by the biomedical industry. Companies use horseshoe crab blood in tests and have nearly doubled the numbers of horseshoe crabs harvested in just seven years.
There are synthetic alternatives to horseshoe crab blood tests in use in Europe, but companies in the U.S. have been slow to adopt the alternatives.
Protecting horseshoe crabs and their habitat under the Endangered Species Act can not only reverse the decline of this prehistoric species but can help to save red knots.
Please add your name to the petition to the Secretary of Commerce who oversees NOAA Fisheries asking that horseshoe crabs be protected under the Endangered Species Act. Learn more about horseshoe crabs in this video from NOAA.
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The Honorable Gina Raimondo, Secretary of Commerce
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[Your Name]
Horseshoe crabs have endured five mass extinctions and survived for nearly a half-billion years. Despite that longevity, in the past three decades, horseshoe crab populations have crashed, and their habitat is rapidly disappearing. Horseshoe crabs are being overharvested for both bait and blood, and their spawning beaches are threatened by development, dredging, erosion, pollution, climate change, and sea level rise.
Protecting horseshoe crabs is crucially-important in saving red knots, a bird species that itself is imperiled and protected under the Endangered Species Act. Red knots rely upon horseshoe crab eggs for their survival on their migratory journey.
We know that the Endangered Species Act is 99 percent effective at stopping extinction. It has saved some of our most iconic species such as wolves, gray whales, and grizzly bears. It's time to add horseshoe crabs to the list of species this law protects.
Please protect horseshoe crabs as an endangered species under the Endangered Species Act.