Alex Erwin
@alexerwin.bsky.social
74 followers 97 following 23 posts
Associate Professor at UF Law Environmental & Natural Resources Law Prof Conservation Geneticist 99% of posts will be shameless self-promotion ...
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For anyone that happens to be in Gainesville this afternoon, I'm giving a seminar to the UF Genetics Institute.
Predator management litigation in the wild!

While I'm sympathetic to some of the claims the bear advocates are making, I think it will be a tough case for them to win.

I wrote about this phenomenon in my recent Utah Law Review article (see ⬇️)

apnews.com/article/bear...
Conservationists sue to stop Florida's first black bear hunt in a decade
Conservationists are suing to stop Florida from holding its first black bear hunt in a decade. State officials approved the plan in August despite strong opposition.
apnews.com
Reposted by Alex Erwin
Sharing my draft article, Protecting Wild Animal Abundance, forthcoming in Utah Law Review, @sjquinney.bsky.social. It highlights loss of relatively common wild #animals as distinct from the #biodiversity crisis, and discusses why US #environmental #law failed to stop such losses.
PROTECTING WILD ANIMAL ABUNDANCE
<p><i><span>Americans today encounter billions fewer wild animals than their grandparents did. These ongoing losses affect an enormous array of interests, inclu
papers.ssrn.com
For junior environmental law folks, we’re hosting our 2nd Annual Early Environmental Law Scholars (EELS) Conference at @uflaw.bsky.social this Nov 6-8. We’ve got it all: paper talks, teaching workshops, a field trip into nature, and more!

Register here:
www.law.ufl.edu/events-feed/...
Early Environmental Law Scholars Conference - Levin College of Law
www.law.ufl.edu
Reposted by Alex Erwin
The use of biotechnology for conservation, whether for de-extinction or genetic augmentation of existing species, promises solutions to otherwise intractable problems in protecting endangered animals. A law professor explains: buff.ly/MfRdVg3
By @alexerwin.bsky.social @fiu.bsky.social
Beyond de-extinction and dire wolves, gene editing can help today’s endangered species
A legal scholar with a Ph.D. in wildlife genetics explains the promise biotechnology techniques hold for some animals that are currently endangered.
buff.ly
Reposted by Alex Erwin
The use of biotechnology for conservation, whether for de-extinction or genetic augmentation of existing species, promises solutions to otherwise intractable problems in protecting endangered animals. A law professor explains: buff.ly/MfRdVg3
By @alexerwin.bsky.social @fiu.bsky.social
Beyond de-extinction and dire wolves, gene editing can help today’s endangered species
A legal scholar with a Ph.D. in wildlife genetics explains the promise biotechnology techniques hold for some animals that are currently endangered.
buff.ly
Congrats to the FIU Law @fiu.bsky.social
Class of 2025 graduates! This was the first group I taught as 1L’s, so I feel like I’m graduating with y’all this year!
Reposted by Alex Erwin
Some big (personal) Earth Day news. I am deeply honored to be named as the first holder of the Oliver Houck Chair in Environmental Law at Tulane. Excited to join the fabulous faculty there law.tulane.edu/news/rebecca...
Rebecca Bratspies named Inaugural Oliver Houck Chair in Environmental Law
Tulane University Law School News
law.tulane.edu
Taught my final class at FIU this morning. My natural resources law students made it extra-special with a UF-themed goodbye care package. It’s been a wonderful 3 years, and the students are what I will miss the most.
Reposted by Alex Erwin
The administration today announced it's rescinding the regulatory definition of "harm" under the #ESA, which includes destroying endangered species' habitat.
public-inspection.federalregister.gov/2025-06746.pdf
public-inspection.federalregister.gov
And that’s all a shame. Because gene editing is a technology with significant potential for conservation. Not as a silver bullet or as an excuse to conserve less or destroy more, but as one tool in the conservation arsenal. 5/5
The Administration can use de-extinction or gene editing as a fig leaf for their cuts to the ESA, but that line of argument is not based on the reality of the science or the purpose of the ESA. And they are going to make those cuts regardless. 4/5
The ESA is supposed to conserve endangered species AND their habitat. Clearly allowing a species to go extinct because it can one day be brought back fails that dual purpose.

The same moral hazard argument can be made about cloning and even captive breeding programs. 3/5
The “dire wolf” isn’t back. They’ve created something that maybe looks and acts like a dire wolf. And that distinction matters if we believe we have a moral or ethical duty not to cause extinction or if we care about all the genetic diversity and evolutionary history lost. 2/5
The moral hazard issue is so dumb. True de-extinction will likely always be impossible. Functional de-extinction can maybe help restore ecosystems. But it is not real de-extinction and does not absolve humanity for its role in extinction. 1/5

www.washingtonpost.com/climate-envi...
Trump team cites wolf ‘de-extinction’ as it seeks to cut endangered species list
The interior secretary hailed a biotech company’s claim to have brought back the dire wolf, while the administration and GOP push to roll back species protections.
www.washingtonpost.com
Reposted by Alex Erwin
I do in fact enjoy this!
Reposted by Alex Erwin
Huge congrats to @uflaw.bsky.social on getting a wonderful scholar and great human being to join them!
After that comeback, now feels like a great time to officially announce that I’m joining the faculty at @uflaw.bsky.social in the Fall! 🐊🐊🐊

I’ll miss my students and colleagues at FIU, but I’m ready for the next chapter (which hopefully involves more national championships)!
Totally agree with the last point. The Interior Sec released this long statement about the agency’s support for the dire wolf “de-extinction”. It’s tonal whiplash from the way FWS plans on delisting gray wolves and turning them over to the states that want to eradicate them