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The Climate Litigation Database

Center for Biological Diversity v. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

About this case

Filing year
2026
Status
Complaint filed.
Docket number
1:26-cv-00043
Court/admin entity
United StatesUnited States District Court for the District of Columbia (D.D.C.)United StatesUnited States Federal Courts
Case category
Federal Statutory Claims (US)Endangered Species Act and Other Wildlife Protection Statutes (US)
Principal law
United StatesAdministrative Procedure Act (APA)United StatesEndangered Species Act (ESA)
At issue
Lawsuit challenging the March 2022 determination that the Rio Grande cooter—a turtle that lives in portions of New Mexico, Texas, and northern Mexico—did not warrant listing as threatened or endangered.
Topics
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Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
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01/08/2026
Complaint filed.
Center for Biological Diversity filed a lawsuit in the federal district court for the District of Columbia challenging the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s determination in March 2022 that the Rio Grande cooter—a turtle that lives in portions of New Mexico, Texas, and northern Mexico—did not warrant listing as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act. The complaint alleged that “[l]ong-term aridification and other extreme weather events driven by climate change threaten the turtle at all stages of its life.” The complaint asserted that FWS acted arbitrarily and capriciously, including by “failing to address the only study specifically modeling climate change impacts on the turtle’s habitat, and failing to rationally explain its decision to exclude the impact of climate change on the feminization of turtle eggs.” The complaint alleged that the study predicted loss of 76% to 90% of the turtle’s present suitable habitat by 2050 in scenarios based on a moderate or severe increase in greenhouse gas emissions. The complaint alleged that instead of considering this study, FWS “relied on broad, generalized geographical projections.”
Complaint

Summary

Lawsuit challenging the March 2022 determination that the Rio Grande cooter—a turtle that lives in portions of New Mexico, Texas, and northern Mexico—did not warrant listing as threatened or endangered.

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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience
Finance