Center for American Progress Center for American Progress
Issues Energy & Environment

The Protected and the Protector

Do a Google query on the phrase “snail darter tiny fish” and the popular Internet search engine returns more than 21,000 entries.

That wouldn’t surprise Cecil Andrus. Three decades ago when he was serving as Secretary of the Department of Interior, Andrus made a wry observation about the tale of the 2 and a half inch long perch that nearly stopped a federal dam project on the Little Tennessee River. It was, he said, “the only fish story I know of where the fish keeps getting smaller.”

The snail darter shrank in the telling because depicting it as a very small and insignificant fish standing in the way of the large Tellico Dam and reservoir project fit the prevailing story line of the first big battle under the 1973 Endangered Species Act. Dam opponents used the new species law and discovery of the darter as a cudgel in their ultimately heartbreaking drive to save the southeast’s premier trout fishery and a verdant valley that supported 300 family farms and contained important Cherokee archaeological sites.

Read more here.

This article was originally published in Trout.

To speak with our experts on this topic, please contact:

Print: Suzi Emmerling (foreign policy and security, energy, education, immigration)
202.481.8224 or semmerling@americanprogress.org

Print: Jason Rahlan (health care, economy, civil rights, poverty)
202.481.8132 or jrahlan@americanprogress.org

Radio: John Neurohr
202.481.8182 or jneurohr@americanprogress.org

TV: Andrea Purse
202.741.6250 or apurse@americanprogress.org

Web: Erin Lindsay
202.741.6397 or elindsay@americanprogress.org

Subscribe to RSS Feeds

RSS IconSite-Wide and Issue-Specific RSS Feeds

Related Articles

Announcements of U.S.-China Cooperation Create a Path to Copenhagen Success, by Julian L. Wong, Andrew Light

It’s Easy Being Green: Spruce Up Your Furniture

Farmers Aren’t the Obstacle in the Global Warming Fight, by Jake Caldwell

The U.S. Clean Energy Economy

Carbon Offsets Would Be a Boon to Farmers, by Tom Kenworthy

Also by Tom Kenworthy

Carbon Offsets Would Be a Boon to Farmers, November 12, 2009

Farmers and Congress Shouldn’t Fall for this Hat Trick, October 26, 2009

For Rural America One Answer Is Blowing in the Wind, September 28, 2009