NOVEMBER 19, 2017
Since time immemorial, human
beings have hunted down animals and messed with the environment for their own
ease and comfort. We might consider ourselves the most evolved species on this
planet, but we have used our 'superior skills' to satiate our selfish ends, all
at the cost of wiping out entire species of animals from the face of the
Earth.
Here are 11 species that our
future generations will never see because of our selfishness.
1. Great Auk
The great auk ( Pinguinus
impennis ) was a flightless coastal bird that lived on rocky islands
around the North Atlantic, including in Canada, Greenland, Iceland, the British
Isles and Scandinavia.
Up until the late 18th century,
they were hunted down in huge numbers. The rare birds soon became a prized
specimen for collectors and they were driven to extinction by the
mid-1850s. The killing of the last mating pair happened on July 3, 1844,
by Sigurour Isleifsson and two other men who had been hired by a merchant to
hunt the birds.
2. Dodo
The dodos belonged to the pigeon
and dove family and were native to the island of Mauritius. Back in 1598, Dutch
travellers were the first to discover this unique species. Dodo's laid only one
egg a year and with the onset of human invasion, their survival came under
major threat.
The importing of dogs, cats,
pigs, rats and crab-eating macaques is what really killed the species. The bird
eventually faded into oblivion, so much so that “dead as a dodo” and “to go the
way of the dodo” are two famous phrases inspired by the death of the species.
3. Elephant Bird
The Elephant Bird, (Aepyornis),
was the largest bird that ever lived. At 10-foot-tall, this 1,000-pound behemoth
once roamed the island of Madagascar. Related to ostriches and emus, the
elephant bird evolved at a time when birds ruled the earth and had existed for
60 million years. But thanks to humans, the bird was hunted into
extinction.
4.Thylacines (Tasmanian Tigers)
The Tasmanian Tiger was an
incredibly unique species. It had the head of a dog, stripes of a cat and the
pouch of a kangaroo. Their killing started after farmers complained about
their livestock going missing, and the only way out was to exterminate them on
a large scale.
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