Some Species Rebound, But More Become Endangered

Black-footed ferrets, Mongolian horses return; Japanese sea lion, Caribbean monk seal gone














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ENDANGERED SPECIES: An estimated 22 percent of the world's known mammals either are at risk of extinction, like this black-footed ferret, or are already gone. Image: FLICKR/BRIAN.GRATWICKE

The global crisis for endangered species is more serious than the financial meltdown, with numbers of imperiled animals and plants rising at record rates, scientists are warning in a report released today.

In its latest four-year assessment of endangered species, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has added several new entries to the Red List of Threatened Species. Judging from the list's expansion, the report warns, the world is unlikely to meet a goal of reversing a trend toward species depletion by 2010.

The report, "Wildlife in a Changing World," estimates that 22 percent of known mammals are either facing the threat of extinction or are already extinct. It also found great stress for amphibians, with more than 30 percent classified as threatened or extinct.

"We now know that nearly one quarter of the world's mammals, nearly one third of amphibians and more than 1 in 8 of all bird species are at risk of extinction," IUCN warns. "This allows us to come to the stark conclusion that wildlife ... is in trouble."

The 2008 review covers 44,837 species, up from 38,047 in 2004 and 16,507 in 2000. Thus far, IUCN has recorded 869 separate cases of plant and animal extinctions, including 804 wiped out and 65 others considered extinct in the wild.

Scientists say the numbers of total recorded extinctions could rise to 1,159 if they add 290 or so critically endangered species now labeled "possibly extinct." There are insufficient data on another 5,561 species.

Recent additions to the list of extinctions are large marine mammals.

Last year's review led scientists to conclude that the Japanese sea lion, which was once abundant in northeast Asia, is now extinct. IUCN also believes the Caribbean monk seal is also gone, as none have been seen alive since the 1950s. Hunting and stress from fishing fleets are believed to have eliminated both animals. And in 2007, scientists determined that the Yangtze river dolphin was driven to extinction by pollution and development.

The newest report also includes assessments of 845 species of corals. Already more than a quarter are considered threatened, with climate change added to the list of threats they face. Still, IUCN cautions that the health of marine life could be worse than expected, as relatively little is known about biodiversity in the oceans.

"The conservation status for most of the world's species remains poorly known, and there is a strong bias in those that have been assessed so far towards terrestrial vertebrates and plants and in particular those species found in biologically well-studied parts of the world," the report says.

Though the overall picture is bleak, scientist also point to signs that conservation efforts are bringing back from the brink some animals previously facing annihilation.

In North America, the Fish and Wildlife Service is credited with probably saving the black-footed ferret from being classified as extinct in the wild to endangered after a 10-year effort to reintroduce the species to eight Western states and Mexico. A conservation effort to save a species of wild horse in Mongolia also saw that animal being bumped from from extinct in the wild to "critically endangered."

The Red List is used as a benchmark for several bilateral and U.N. treaties aimed at wildlife protection, including the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands and the Convention on Biological Diversity. Data from the list are also used by scientists working under the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change to help them track how global warming could be affecting wild flora and fauna.


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  1. 1. scientific earthling 08:02 PM 7/2/09

    No biodiversity - No homo sapiens.

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  2. 2. Farmer2 07:24 PM 7/3/09

    If we keep chasing the 1% (endangered species) all of western civilization will eventually become paralized. You won't even be able to brush you teeth without killing some helpless plant or animal. We spend billions and billions on Endanged species and less then 1% ever make it off the list. Time to cut some of them loose and concetrate on the ones that have a chance! Species come and go. It has always been that way. Some people want to undo the natural way. Good Luck!

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  3. 3. speedchase92 11:43 PM 7/4/09


    Although the extinction of various species is a natural phenomenon, the rate of extinction occurring in today's world is exceptional -- as many as 100 to1,000 times greater than normal, Dr. Donald A. Levin said in the January-February issue of American Scientist magazine.

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  4. 4. speedchase92 11:45 PM 7/4/09

    Although the extinction of various species is a natural phenomenon, the rate of extinction occurring in today's world is exceptional -- as many as 100 to1,000 times greater than normal, Dr. Donald A. Levin said in the January-February issue of American Scientist magazine (2002)

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  5. 5. eco-steve 05:28 AM 7/6/09

    It is human overpopulation that is putting pressure on fauna and flora alike. To produce 1 pound of beef takes 50 pounds of cereals, plus soy beans. Eat less meat and we can feed the world. Well-fed people have less children, taking pressure off world ressources and reducing pollution. It is for individual consumers to reject beef, and limit meat-eating to two days per week. Don't wait for politicians to legislate...

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  6. 6. frgough 09:57 AM 7/6/09

    Sorry, guys. You lost most of your credibility when you proclaimed the Blue Whale extinct, and all of it when you declared the Spotted Owl endangered. Neither was true.

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