One-third of species are
vulnerable to extinction, a crisis ravaging swaths of creatures,
conservationists say in call to fund recovery plans
Oliver
Milman in New York
Thu 29 Mar
2018 16.00 BSTLast modified on Thu 29 Mar 2018 23.45 BST
An extinction crisis is rippling
though America’s wildlife, with scores of species at risk of being wiped out
unless recovery plans start to receive sufficient funding, conservationists
have warned.
One-third of species in the US
are vulnerable to extinction, a crisis that has ravaged swaths of creatures
such as butterflies, amphibians, fish and bats, according to a report compiled
by a coalition of conservation groups. A further one in five species face an
even greater threat, with a severe risk of being eliminated amid a “serious
decline” in US biodiversity, the report warns.
“America’s wildlife are in
crisis,” said Collin O’Mara, chief executive of the National Wildlife Federation.
“Fish, birds, mammals, reptiles and invertebrates are all losing ground. We owe
it to our children and grandchildren to prevent these species from vanishing
from the earth.”
More than 1,270 species found in
the US are listed as
at risk under the federal Endangered Species Act, an imperiled
menagerie that includes the grizzly bear, California condor, leatherback sea
turtle and rusty patched bumble bee. However, the actual number of threatened
species is “far higher than what is formally listed”, states the report by the
National Wildlife Federation, American Fisheries Society and the Wildlife
Society.
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