Last Ones: America's Endangered Species



Photo Title

Last Ones: America's Endangered Species

Photographer/Creator

Joel Sartore

Collection

Publisher

National Geographic Magazine (David Griffin, Director of Photography; Kathy Moran, Photo Editor)

Caption/Description

Essay: The US Endangered Species Act is a vital, though controversial, tool in the fight to save species from extinction. It protects everything from polar bears to beach mice to a single species of fly. By isolating some of the protected species on black and white backgrounds, they are given equal consideration (and hopefully equal attention) by readers. Public support of the law is vital to its continuance, saving hundreds of species for future generations. Caption: They survived the Ice Age, but condors barely held out against Homo sapiens. Many of these scavengers were shot or poisoned by fragments of lead left behind by hunters. In 1985 just nine wild birds remained. Captive breeding and reduced use of lead ammunition have brought the species back.

Citation

Joel Sartore, "Last Ones: America's Endangered Species," in POYi Archive, Item #43256, http://archive.poy.org/items/show/43256 (accessed November 23, 2024).

Date Added

04.26.2011