Tag Archives: Endangered species

Animals & Extinction ~~ Here are 20


20 Animals You Didn’t Know Are Going Extinct

When it comes to the Endangered Species List, some animals stand out  as celebrities: polar bears, giant pandas, rhinos, snow leopards… But  sadly, the list is so extensive that there are many species you may  never have suspected are endangered. Here are twenty of them.

1. Zebras

An icon of the African plains and a necessity in any wildlife  documentary about lions going a’ huntin’, the zebra is actually in  trouble. Well, really, it’s the Grevy’s zebra. There are two species of zebra in Africa, the Plains zebra and the Grevy’s zebra. While the  Plains zebra is doing alright, the Grevy’s is in dire straights with only about 2,500 individuals left in the wild.

Photo: Mr. Muskrat

2.Peacocks

We wouldn’t think of peacocks as endangered, considering you can find   them in any wildlife park, petting zoo and even random farms across the  country. But there are subspecies of this flamboyant bird that are in  danger of disappearing, including the Bornean Peacock Pheasant pictured above and the Hainan Peacock Pheasant of the island Hainan, China. For both species, habitat loss is a major factor for their decline. Only about 600-1,700 Bornean Peacock Pheasants  and around 350-1,500 Hainan Peacock Pheasants left in the world.

Photo: Silvain de Munck

3. Giraffes

Giraffes are practically part of the landscape of Africa, standing  tree-like in the grasslands. Most giraffe species are of no concern to  conservationists, yet a sub-species (or, as some researchers propose a  separate species), the Rothschild giraffe,   a.k.a. Baringo Giraffe or Ugandan Giraffe, is endangered. Those living   in the wild are found in protected areas in Kenya and Uganda, while  about 450 individuals are found in zoos around the world.

Photo: Lutrus

4. Hummingbirds

Though you may see a flock around that sugar-water feeder you set  out, quite a few hummingbird species are actually listed as endangered  by IUCN. Some of these species include the Oaxaca Hummingbird pictured above, with around 600-1,700 mature individuals left; Mangrove hummingbird, which was only discovered in 2005 and lives along the Pacific coast of Costa Rica; and the Chestnut-billed hummingbird, a species found in Columbia with only about 600-1,700 individuals left.

Photo: campyloterus

5. Horses

Horses?!? Yep, horses are endangered. Specifically, the Przewalski’s Horse.   Closely related to but genetically unique from its domestic cousins,  this wild horse is critically endangered. It was listed as extinct from the wild from the 1960s to 1996 when one surviving individual was found   in the wild and other individuals were reintroduced. Currently, there are about 50 mature horses living in the wild with more individuals in captive breeding programs and zoos. That’s not very many and a major  threat to the species is a loss of genetic diversity and thus disease.

Photo: bobosh_t

6. Howler Monkey

Howler monkeys are so common to Central and South America that it’s  hard to think there is any risk for them. But with habitat loss and  capture or predation by humans, there is indeed a problem for several  species. The Guatemalan Black Howler Monkey is endangered and is expected to decline by up to 60% over the next 30 years. Meanwhile, the Red-handed Howling Monkey is critically endangered with less than 2,500 mature individuals remaining in the wild.

Photo: gr8dnes

7. Fruit Bats

Sure, some bat species are having trouble what with that awful white nose syndrome spreading, but fruit bats? Turns out, a whole slew of species of fruit bat are endangered, some of which include the Golden-capped Fruit Bat (around 10,000 individuals left), the Salim Ali’s Fruit Bat (possibly as few as 250-350 left), the Sao Tomé Collared Fruit Bat (population unknown but naturally rare), and the Small-toothed Fruit Bat (only seven specimens found).

Photo: smccann

8. Ground Squirrel

Rodents are usually a surprise for the Endangered Species list since they tend to be great at adapting and especially skilled at reproducing.  But if they don’t have a place to live, they’re flat out of luck.  Thanks to agriculture and a whole lot of rodenticide, the San Joaquin Antelope Ground Squirrel of California has less than 20% of its former range and an estimated 124,000-413,000 individuals left.

Photo: James Marvin Phelps

9. Dolphins

Even the most charismatic of animals isn’t off the chopping block. The South Asian River Dolphin has two subspecies based on the river systems in which they are found, the Ganges River Dolphin and the Indus River Dolphin. Though a strong  effort has been made to research and conserve the species, there is  still relatively little known about them. Of the Ganges River Dolphins, there are about 1,200–1,800 left, while there are an estimated 965 Indus  River Dolphins left.

Photo: Joachim S. Muller

10. Wolf Spider

They’re in every garden, right? Well, turns out there is an  interesting species of wolf spider that’s not in any garden. Called the Kaua’i Cave Wolf Spider or   the No-eyed Big-eyed Wolf Spider (huh??), this species is native to  this island alone, lives in just a handful of caves, and is the only  species of wolf spider known to be eyeless. Discovered in 1971, the  species was placed on the list of endangered species in 2000.

Photo: e_monk

11. Mice

Yep, even mice are on the Endangered Species list. Quite a few have the dubious honor, including the Himalayan Field Mouse, the Nelson’s Spiny Pocket Mouse, and the White-tailed Mouse.

Photo: randomtruth

No! Not parakeets! There are gorgeous species of this popular house pet on the brink of extinction in no small part because of their popularity as house pets. Populations of the Sun Parakeet and the Gray-cheeked Parakeet have declined rapidly because of trapping for the cagebird trade. Habitat loss is also a factor, as with the Soccorro Parakeet ,   a species for which sheep grazing and other habitat degradation has  made the population decline to possibly as few as 250 mature adults.

Photo: awayukin

12. Parakeets

13. Crayfish

Usually we think of crayfish as a common Southern food pulled from  rivers. However a surprising number of crayfish species are on the  decline. Those on the Endangered Species list include the White-clawed Crayfish (pictured above), the Phantom Cave Crayfish, the Slenderclaw crayfish, the Giant Freshwater Crayfish and the aptly named Sweet Home Alabama crayfish of Marshall county, Alabama. If that last one doesn’t have you worried about the future of crayfish cook-offs, we don’t know what will!

Photo: dubh

14. Deer

Many species of tiny musk deer, so diminutive they look like the  prehistoric animals that were the first mammals to arrive on the planet.   The species include the Himalayan Muskdeer, the Black Muskdeer (pictured above), the Kashmir Muskdeer, and Chinese Forest Musk Deer among others.

Photo: limbun

15. Water Buffalo

The water buffalo is a surprise for this list as we think of it as a domesticated animal, but like horses, it’s the wild cousins of the domesticated beasts that are at risk. There are as few as 2,500 mature individuals left and researchers estimate the species has  experienced a population decline of at least 50% over the last three  generations. The major threats include interbreeding with feral and  domestic buffalo, as well as hunting and habitat loss.

Photo: Sum_of_Marc

     16. Vultures

Vultures aren’t usually the most attractive of birds, but the Egyptian Vulture,   is a notable exception. The striking bird is found in Europe, Africa  and India, however rapid and severe declines in the Indian populations  as well as long-term decline in the European populations put the species   at around 13,000-41,000 mature individuals.

Photo: jan.stefka

17. Hippos

No, not the big, mean hippos famed for killing around 2,900 people a year. It’s their mini cousins on the Endangered Species list, the Pygmy hippo.   These round and adorable hippos are nocturnal and not much is known  about them because of their secretive ways. The last population estimate   in 1990 put the species at 3,000 individuals and habitat loss since  then suggests that even this estimate was (and is) too high. Meanwhile, there are about 303 animals in captivity.

Photo: dommylive

18. Sea Lions

Pinnipeds are geniuses in the marine world, but sadly their smarts can’t keep them off the Endangered Species list.

The Steller Sea Lion,   the fourth largest pinniped, has a global population of around  105,800-117,800 animals, but troubling declines especially in the Gulf  of Alaska has conservationists concerned. The Australian Sealion is also in trouble with an estimated population of only 13,790 individuals.

Photo: Dan Hershman

19. Gazelle

As with zebras, no documentary about the African savanna is complete without some gazelles being caught by lions or cheetahs. But that  doesn’t mean several species are in more trouble than any number of  feline predators could pose. The Cuvier’s Gazelle of north-west Africa is estimated at just 1,750 – 2,950 individuals. Meanwhile the Slender-horned Gazelle of the Sahara has only around 250 mature individuals left. The Speke’s Gazelle (pictured above) from the Horn of Africa now extinct in Ethiopia and  remaining populations in Somalia are thought to be in the tens of  thousands but they face severe pressure from hunting and habitat loss.

Photo: sandy richard

20. Mockingbirds

They may annoy you by mimicking a car alarm early in the morning, but   mockingbirds are amazing creatures. Unfortunately, at least one  species, the San Cristobal Mockingbird,   endemic to the island of San Cristóbal in the central Galápagos  islands, is endangered. There are only around 5,300 mature individuals  left.

Nothing on Earth exists without a reason, without a purpose.  Mother Nature is excellent at getting rid of things that don’t fill a  function and thus what remains here is actually important — whether or  not humans recognize that importance. Some species are on their way out  through natural selection, but others (possibly even most?) are being  forced out by factors brought on by we humans. Whether or not a species is beautiful, valuable to an economy, important to science or any other   reason, it deserves recognition for its role in an ecosystem and effort  put into conserving it in the wild. It’s not just the species making the  news that need help — it’s also some that would surprise you.

Photo: YamezA

John Hocevar, Greenpeace


 

Greenpeace  
 
 

The National Marine Fisheries Service wants to allow fishing nets known as “walls of death” in crucial leatherback turtle habitat.

Take Action
Act now to tell them to protect this endangered species.

take action today

Endangered leatherback turtles migrate 6,000 miles across the Pacific each year, and at the end of their journey looms a deadly threat.

Drift gillnets, known as “walls of death,” float just off the California coast. While their purpose is to catch swordfish, these nets ensnare and drown more than a hundred marine mammals a year. Rare sharks and endangered sea turtles are also among the casualties.

Leatherback turtles can currently take refuge in a small conservation area, but not for much longer. The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) is working to shrink this safe space—a move that threatens the survival of their species.

NMFS has tried to rollback conservation areas before, and has only backed down when facing fierce public opposition. Together, we can stop NMFS again, and help leatherback turtles stave off extinction.

Send a message to NMFS to tell them that conservation areas for endangered leatherback turtles should be expanded, not put in jeopardy.

Around the world, the leatherback population is plummeting due to careless fishing practices. Even though leatherbacks have thrived for millions of years, scientists predict it won’t last another 20 years if we don’t act. At this point, even one leatherback killed is too many.

And these nets are not just killers for leatherbacks. Whales, sea lions, dolphins, and other endangered species become entangled and die every year. For every one pound of swordfish caught by these gillnets, 27 pounds of other marine species die pointlessly.

We must keep waging battles with those who plunder our fisheries rather than manage them—whether it is off the California coast, in the frigid waters of the Bering Sea or in the fisheries of the Atlantic—to secure our oceans’ future.

Act now and tell NMFS that you want stronger protections for the leatherback turtle and other species near these dangerous fisheries.

Overfishing, climate change, and ocean acidification threaten to turn our oceans into deserts. Greenpeace is working for a future where overfishing has ceased, while endangered species like the leatherback turtle can flourish in protected marine reserves.

Every short-sighted and profit-driven decision we stop is another step towards true protection of the ocean ecosystems that nourish us.

Let’s bring down these “walls of death.”

For the oceans,

John Hocevar
Greenpeace USA Ocean Campaign Director

Protect All the Critical Habitat Necessary for the Jaguar’s Recovery


Center for Biological Diversity

 

JaguarJaguars are returning to the Southwest, part of their native range since time immemorial. While we celebrate the homecoming of these beautiful animals, their future is far from secure: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has proposed to designate only a portion of their potential habitat as protected “critical habitat.” 

We must protect the canyons and forests where jaguars can thrive from being destroyed by devastating mines, sprawling subdivisions and the draining of rivers and streams. Endangered animals with protected critical habitat are more than twice as likely to be recovering as those without.

Please take action now to tell the Service to protect all of the habitat the jaguars need to recover in the Southwest and give them a real welcome home.

Click here to find out more and take action.

If you have trouble following the link, go to http://action.biologicaldiversity.org/p/dia/action3/common/public/?action_KEY=11765

Senator Patty Murray responds to pending legislation in the Senate:the Gray Wolf


 Thank you for writing to me regarding the priority you place on the protection of the gray wolf. It was good to hear from you.

 I have consistently supported robust laws to protect endangered species, including efforts to protect Pacific salmon and Puget Sound orcas. Rest assured, I oppose rolling back important environmental protections like the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and support funding to protect endangered species and enhance habitat in Washington State. Thank you for alerting me to legislation regarding endangered species currently pending before the Senate.

 Throughout my tenure in the Senate, I have been a strong supporter of protection for endangered species and their critical habitats. Please know that I will work with my colleagues in the Senate and as a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee to see that endangered species programs obtain proper funding, and as the Senate addresses issues related to conservation and protection of wildlife during the 112th Congress, I will keep your thoughts in mind.

 If you would like to know more about my work in the Senate, please feel free to sign up for my weekly updates at http://murray.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=GetEmailUpdates. Again, thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts with me.

EMAIL.BEGINHIDE.MERGE

 Sincerely,

A

Patty Murray

United States Senator

PM\as

Sincerely,

Patty Murray

United States Senator

Department of Interior responds to our comments


Forward this emailSign upDonate
Union of Concerned Scientists
Strengthening Science at the DOI
After receiving more than 10,000 comments from UCS supporters—Interior Secretary Ken Salazar issued a strong scientific integrity policy.

Read More

Department of Interior Responds to Our Comments

Last month, we asked UCS supporters like you to submit comments regarding the Department of the Interior’s (DOI’s) draft scientific integrity policy. The policy would have done little to prevent the kind of manipulation and distortion of science that has skewed decisions on everything from underwater oil drilling to endangered species.

Last Wednesday—after receiving more than ten thousand comments from UCS supporters—Interior Secretary Ken Salazar issued a radically different scientific integrity policy that addresses most of the issues we raised. Read our reaction here.

I heard personally from staff at the DOI that they relied heavily upon our input in shaping the new policy, and it’s clear that this public pressure convinced them to do the right thing. Together, we made sure the DOI heard loud and clear that the public supports strong actions to protect government science.

On the heels of this victory, we need to ensure strong scientific integrity standards like these are in place throughout the federal government.

In September, UCS released the results of a survey of government scientists who work on food safety—hundreds reported political interference in their work over the past year. These results clearly illustrate the need for better protection for whistleblowers, the right for scientists to speak publicly about their work, and other critical reforms to defend science from political interference.

In March 2009, President Obama asked the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy to create a detailed plan to protect the integrity of science throughout the federal government. In September, the president’s science advisor told us a plan would come by the end of 2010, and we intend to hold the White House to this promise. In the meantime, you can track the administration’s progress here.

Sincerely,

MichaelHalpern_jpg
Michael Halpern
National Field Organizer
UCS Scientific Integrity Program