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Protect Ancient Lake Sturgeon Before These Magnificent Fish Disappear

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Sponsor: Free The Ocean

Lake sturgeon have survived since the age of dinosaurs. Federal officials must not leave them without protection.

Close-up of a lake sturgeon swimming in blue water, showing its long snout, whisker-like barbels, and ridged body.

Lake sturgeon are among North America’s most remarkable freshwater animals. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says the species traces its origins back at least 150 million years and that the largest individuals can grow to about 7 feet long, weigh 200 to 300 pounds, and live to 150 years old.5

But ancient survival does not guarantee modern protection. In 2024, the Fish and Wildlife Service determined that lake sturgeon did not require listing under the Endangered Species Act.6 In 2026, the Center for Biological Diversity launched legal action challenging that denial, arguing that the agency ignored widespread habitat loss, persistently low populations, and mounting climate threats.1

NewsChannel 9 reported that the lawsuit challenges the agency’s refusal to protect the species and argues that the decision overlooks severe population declines and ongoing threats.2

Dams And Pollution Still Block Recovery

Lake sturgeon are long-lived, slow-maturing fish. That makes recovery difficult when populations are depleted. They need access to clean rivers and spawning habitat, but dams and barriers can block migration and interrupt reproduction.

The Federal Register notice on the 2024 decision identified dams, barriers, and climate change as primary threats affecting the lake sturgeon’s biological status.6 The Fish and Wildlife Service also says access to healthy habitat remains a major challenge for lake sturgeon restoration, with dams, channelization, dredging, pollution, farming, and logging all contributing to blocked migration and degraded habitat.5

WLUK FOX 11 reported that the Center for Biological Diversity intends to sue over the agency’s denial of ESA protections.3 Outdoor News reported that advocates are pushing for federal protection despite disagreement from some state fisheries voices.4

Federal Officials Must Reconsider

Director Nesvik and Secretary Burgum should order a new status review that fully accounts for habitat fragmentation, climate change, water pollution, dam impacts, and the species’ slow reproductive timeline.

The agency should also work with states, Tribes, watershed groups, and conservation partners to improve fish passage, protect spawning grounds, reduce pollution, and restore river systems where lake sturgeon can reproduce naturally.

Lake sturgeon are not just another fish. They are living reminders of ancient rivers, and their survival depends on whether modern law protects the waterways they need.

Sign now to urge federal wildlife officials to revisit the denial of Endangered Species Act protection for lake sturgeon and protect the rivers these ancient fish need to survive.

More on this issue:

  1. Center for Biological Diversity, Center for Biological Diversity (27 April 2026), "Lawsuit Launched to Secure Endangered Species Protection for Lake Sturgeon."
  2. Nathan Gayle, NewsChannel 9 (30 April 2026), "Lawsuit targets U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service over endangered species protection denial."
  3. WLUK FOX 11 Staff, WLUK FOX 11 (7 May 2026), "Environmental group plans to sue over sturgeon's lack of endangered species protections."
  4. Outdoor News Staff, Outdoor News (29 April 2026), "Center for Biological Diversity lawsuit wants sturgeon on endangered species list."
  5. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Accessed 10 June 2026), "Lake Sturgeon."
  6. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Federal Register (23 April 2024), "Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; 12-Month Finding for Lake Sturgeon."

The Petition

To the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Secretary of the Interior,

I urge the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Department of the Interior to revisit the denial of Endangered Species Act protections for lake sturgeon and conduct a new, science-based status review.

Lake sturgeon are ancient freshwater fish that have survived for more than 150 million years. They can live for generations, grow to extraordinary sizes, and depend on clean rivers and accessible spawning grounds. But they cannot recover if dams, pollution, barriers, habitat loss, and climate change continue to fragment the waters they need.

The Fish and Wildlife Service denied federal protection in 2024. Conservation advocates are now challenging that decision, arguing that the agency ignored severe historic declines, persistently low populations, and ongoing habitat threats. These concerns deserve a full and transparent review.

Lake sturgeon are slow to mature and slow to rebound. When spawning habitat is blocked or degraded, recovery can take decades. A few local successes should not be used to dismiss broader threats across the species’ range.

Please reopen the status review, consider Endangered Species Act protection, protect spawning habitat, improve fish passage, address dam and barrier impacts, reduce pollution, and plan for climate-driven changes to river systems. The agency should work with states, Tribes, scientists, and watershed groups to ensure lake sturgeon have connected, clean, and protected waterways.

This species is a living link to prehistoric freshwater ecosystems. It should not be left vulnerable because federal officials declared recovery secure too soon.

Please act now to protect lake sturgeon and the rivers they need.

Sincerely,