December 5, 2017 by Elaine
Kurtenbach
Two types of New Zealand kiwi
birds are a rare bright spot in a mostly grim assessment of global species at
risk of extinction.
The International Union for the
Conservation of Nature upgraded the Okarito kiwi and the Northern Brown kiwi
from endangered to vulnerable thanks to New Zealand's progress in controlling
predators like stoats and cats.
But the conservation group's
latest update Tuesday mostly reported grave threats to animals and plants due
to loss of habitat and unsustainable farming and fisheries practices.
The group said the Irrawaddy
dolphin and finless porpoise that roam coastlines of Southeast Asia are now
designated as endangered, imperiled by entanglement in fishing nets and other
human activities.
For its Red List of Threatened
Species, the group assessed the status of 91,523 species, of which 25,821 are
threatened, 866 are extinct and 69 extinct in the wild. It said 11,783 species
are vulnerable, 8,455 are endangered and 5,583 critically endangered.
Behind the numbers are
life-and-death struggles for survival as human populations grow and
industrialize and habitats are transformed by global warming.
Australia's Western Ringtail
possum has slipped from vulnerable to critically endangered, the IUCN said, as
its population plunged by 80 percent over the past decade.
Once widespread in peppermint and
eucalyptus forests of Western Australia, now it has only a few fragmented
habitats and is prone to heat stress at temperatures above 35 C (95 F) that are
becoming increasingly common where it lives.
The group said three reptile
species on Christmas Island, also in Australia, had gone extinct in the wild:
the Whiptail-skink, the Blue-tailed skink and Lister's gecko. The group said
the losses of reptiles were mysterious but might be due to introduction of a
disease and the arrival of the yellow crazy ant.
The IUCN and Global Invasive
Species Database list that ant as one of the 100 worst invasive species. The
creature has wreaked havoc on Christmas Island, devouring the famous endemic
red crabs that were a key part of its ecosystem.
Apart from many animal species
the IUCN said many wild crops, such as wild wheat, rice and yam, face threats
from overgrazing, use of herbicides and urbanization.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!