Subscribe Sign up to receive new posts by email. Email Subscribe Search Categories Call for Data (11) Contributor Spotlight (34) Education and Awareness (61) General (35) Monthly Updates (9) Partner Spotlight (2) Quarterly Updates (24) Semiannual Updates (3) Taxon of the week (13) Yearly review (4) CNDDB News Blog All CNDDB Blog Posts Legal status of Bumble Bees in California October 6, 2021 Bombus occidentalis photograph by iNaturalist user @johnccnd (CC BY-NC 4.0) from Plumas County, California The California Natural Diversity Database (CNDDB) tracks 6 bumble bees (Bombus sp.) that are identified as species of greatest conservation need. Four of these bumble bees were petitioned to the State of California in 2018 and the Fish and Game Commission advanced them to candidacy in June 2019 (B. franklini, B. crotchii, B. occidentalis, B. suckleyi). This was challenged in court and in November 2020 the Superior Court ruled that insects are not eligible for listing under the California Endangered Species Act (CESA). Pending ongoing litigation, no bumble bees have legal status under CESA and none are currently considered candidates for listing by the State. However, effective 23 September 2021, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has listed Franklin’s bumble bee (Bombus franklini) as federally Endangered. Franklin’s bumble bee has one of the smallest ranges of Bombus spp. worldwide, only known from the Klamath Mountains region of northern California and southern Oregon. Franklin’s bumble bee has faced precipitous decline. The last known detection of Franklin’s bumble bee in California was in 1998 and the last known detection in Oregon was in 2006, the latter despite regular survey efforts to historic sites. Some fear this species may already be extinct. Common Name Scientific Name State Status Federal Status NatureServe State Rank Other Status Franklin's bumble bee B. franklini None Endangered S1 IUCN Critical Crotch bumble bee B. crotchii None None S1S2 IUCN Endangered western bumble bee B. occidentalis None None S1 IUCN Vulnerable Suckley's cuckoo bumble bee B. suckleyi None None S1 IUCN Critical obscure bumble bee B. caliginosus None None S1S2 IUCN Vulnerable Morrison bumble bee B. morrisoni None None S1S2 IUCN Vulnerable Additional resources: Overview of the listing process under CESA, Weiland et al. 2021, California Fish and Wildlife Journal, Special Endangered Species Issue:28-40 (PDF) Almond Alliance of California v. California Department of Fish and Wildlife, Sacramento Superior Court No. 34-2019-80003216. Franklin’s bumble bee, USFWS Environmental Conservation Online System Franklin’s bumble bee species status assessment, USFWS 2018 Nature Serve Conservation Ranks International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List California Department of Fish and Wildlife: Pollinators US Fish and Wildlife Service: Pollinators Xerces Society Pollinator Conservation Program Continue reading... Categories: Education and Awareness Tagged: Rare/Threatened/Endangered Species and Special Plants and Animals Lists: Quarterly Update October 4, 2021 The following CNDDB documents have been updated: Special Vascular Plants, Bryophytes, and Lichens List (PDF) Endangered, Threatened, and Rare Plants List (PDF) Changes to the CNDDB Special Vascular Plants, Bryophytes, and Lichens List (PDF) Special Animals List (PDF) Endangered and Threatened Animals List (PDF) Links to the T&E and Special Plants/Animals lists can be found on the CNDDB Plants and Animals web page. More information about state listing can be found at the California Fish and Game Commission CESA website and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife CESA website. If you have any questions about these lists, please email us at CNDDB@wildlife.ca.gov. Continue reading... Categories: Quarterly Updates Tagged: Celebrating 100,000 element occurrences August 26, 2021 CNDDB recently celebrated the creation of our 100,000th element occurrence! For those of you who don’t know, element occurrences are summaries of all we know about a species in an area. An element occurrence could be a single detection, or a summary of 100 years’ worth of data. While this milestone could not be achieved without the dedicated staff who have sifted through data and organized it all, we need to give the real credit where it is due. To all our contributors, thank you! The CNDDB is a testament to your passion and dogged efforts to protect California’s wild species. We will continue to collect, aggregate, and distribute rare species data that biologists all over California have contributed to assist in better conservation and species management. Join our effort by submitting your detections of rare species through our Online Field Survey Form. Let’s reach that next milestone together! Continue reading... Categories: General Tagged: Prev12...12131415161718...6162Next