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This article is from The Star Online (http://thestar.com.my)

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2004/1/6/features/6740749 & sec=fe\

atures

 

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Tuesday January 6, 2004

Critically endangered

By ERICA BULMAN

 

More species are racing toward extinction according to the latest Red List,

ERICA BULMAN reports.

 

IMAGINE having to tell your children that it & #8217;s the end of the line for

Peter Rabbit, and that he and the rest of the Cottontail family had nowhere to

live and were decimated by trappers and wild animals.

 

That & #8217;s what conservationists are having to do in South Africa, where the

riverine rabbit is on the brink of extinction. With fewer than 250 breeding

pairs left, the riverine rabbit could soon join the long-departed wooly mammoth

among the ranks of vanished creatures.

 

The bunnies aren & #8217;t the only ones facing extinction. According to the 2003

Red List of Threatened Species released last month by the World Conservation

Union (IUCN), the variegated spider monkey, the tiny Galapagos snail, and the

Mekong giant catfish are also fighting for their future.

 

The turtle-like Seychelles fresh water terrapin lost its battle this year and

is gone forever. Two Hawaiian plants & #8211; the flowering Clermonteia peleane

and the palm-like Cyanea superba & #8211; both critically endangered last year,

are now extinct in the wild. Eight other species were added to the extinct in

the wild list, including an earthworm from Tasmania, Australia, last seen in

1971.

 

There are 12,259 known plants and animal species threatened with extinction,

falling into the critically endangered, endangered, or vulnerable categories,

said the IUCN.

 

Last year the number was at 11,167, but the Gland, Switzerland-based

organisation said it is difficult to compare the numbers because new species are

being discovered and others change categories.

 

The only burrowing rabbit in Africa, the riverine rabbit is recognised by its

distinctive long ears, a black-brown stripe on its lower jaw, and a dark fluffy

tail visible when it hops away. Already considered one of the rarest animals in

the world, the riverine rabbit produces only one offspring a year and about four

in a lifetime.

 

With the loss of habitation and prey to trappers, feral cats, and dogs, it is

expected to become even rarer, the report said.

 

Like the furry-footed leaf-eaters, South-East Asia & #8217;s Mekong giant

catfish, one of the world & #8217;s largest freshwater fish, was also uplisted to

critically endangered. Up to 3m long and 300kg, this fat catfish suffers from

overfishing, habitat loss, and obstruction of migration routes through dam

construction. Its numbers have declined by more than 80% the last 13 years.

 

Two Latin American primate species have also become critically endangered

because of habitat loss. On the island paradises of Hawaii, the Seychelles, and

Galapagos, invasive species are squeezing out thousands of native varieties.

 

Many of the 49 species of Galapagos Island snails are critically endangered,

possibly already extinct. Once collected by Charles Darwin, the tiny snails had

survived volcanoes and extreme drought over the millennia. But invasive species

such as goats, pigs, and fire ants, are threatening them, experts said. So is

human invasion, which is also endangering some 85 plant species on the islands

due to housing development, tourism, and agriculture.

 

“The Red List tells us human activities are leading to a swathe of extinctions

that could make these islands ecologically and aesthetically barren,” said World

Conservation Union director general Achim Steiner.

 

The short-beaked dolphin of the Mediterranean was added to the endangered list

after it declined more than 50% over the last 30 to 40 years because the fish it

eats have been depleted by pollution and overfishing.

 

Surprisingly, 11 species previously considered extinct were rediscovered last

year & #8211; including the fabulous green sphinx moth found in Hawaii. The moth

was likely thought extinct because it is so difficult to collect.

 

Indonesia, India, Brazil, China, and Peru are among the countries with the

highest number of known threatened birds and mammals, while plants are declining

rapidly in Ecuador, Malaysia, Indonesia, Brazil, and Sri Lanka, the report said.

 

The Red List, produced by a network of some 7,000 experts working in almost

every country in the world, found that 762 species have disappeared over the

last 500 years, with a further 58 known only in artificial settings, such as

zoos.

 

The group has examined some 18,000 species and subspecies around the globe. But

scientists say much more must be done. Earth is home to an estimated 14 million

species, and only 1.75 million have been documented. Many may become extinct

before they are even identified.

 

Conservationists think the current extinction rate is 1,000 to 10,000 times

higher than it should be under natural conditions. That means that in the first

decades of the 21st century, many creatures may disappear.

 

The primary reason is humans. Everything from expanding cities to

deforestation, agriculture, and fishing pose a significant threat to the

planet & #8217;s biodiversity, IUCN says.

 

“Human activities may be the main threat to the world & #8217;s species, but

humans can also help them recover,” said Steiner. & #8211; AP<p>

 

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