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Press Release
Service Announces Draft Recovery Plan for Callippe Silverspot Butterfly
Butterfly is found in San Mateo, Solano and Sonoma Counties, California.
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SACRAMENTO, California Today, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is announcing the availability of a draft recovery plan for Callippe silverspot butterfly, marking the beginning of a 60-day public comment period on the draft. Draft plans available for review and comment include:

Callippe silverspot butterfly (Speyeria callippe callippe) is an endangered butterfly found in San Mateo, Sonoma and Solano Counties, California. Threats to Callippe silverspot butterfly include habitat loss from human activities, habitat modification by invasive grasses and native shrubs, pesticides, illegal collection, population-level catastrophic events and threats associated with climate change climate change
Climate change includes both global warming driven by human-induced emissions of greenhouse gases and the resulting large-scale shifts in weather patterns. Though there have been previous periods of climatic change, since the mid-20th century humans have had an unprecedented impact on Earth's climate system and caused change on a global scale.

Learn more about climate change

Recovery plans are designed to guide recovery efforts of a species by addressing threats so that the risk of extinction is reduced to the point at which the species no longer needs protection under the Endangered Species Act. To that end, a recovery plan outlines tactics for preserving and increasing the health and size of species populations to the degree that it can successfully withstand natural variability and catastrophic events and adapt to environmental change over time. Detailed criteria for downlisting or delisting this species can be found in its draft plan.

The Service received a $62.5 million investment in Inflation Reduction Act funds to address Endangered Species Recovery Planning efforts that will be implemented over the next several years to benefit more than 300 species currently listed under the Endangered Species Act. This infusion of funding allowed the Service to hire additional biologists to complete recovery plans that are necessary to recover species and remove them from the Endangered Species list.

The draft recovery plan can be found here (pdf). Comments on the draft recovery plan can be submitted by February 18, 2025. To submit a comment, email FW8_RecoveryTeam@fws.gov or send comments via mail to Dan Cox, Sacramento Fish and Wildlife Office, 2800 Cottage Way, Room W-2605, Sacramento, CA 95825.

The Endangered Species Act is extraordinarily effective at preventing species from going extinct and has inspired action to conserve at-risk species and their habitat before they need to be listed as threatened or endangered. Since it was signed into law in 1973, more than 99% of all species listed under the law are still with us today.   

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Endangered and/or Threatened species
Insects
Pollinators