The Daily Courier

WWF sounds alarm over wildlife decline

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An extensive survey of 903 species of Canadian birds, fish, mammals, reptiles and amphibians over more than four decades has found that half of them are in serious population decline.

Declining species lost a total of 83 per cent of their numbers between 1970 and 2014, says the report released today by the World Wildlife Fund. Species protected by federal legislatio­n shrank nearly as quickly as those that weren’t.

“In general terms, the Species At Risk Act does not seem to have made any difference,” said WWF president David Miller. “There’s an incredible urgency to reverse the decline.”

The Living Planet Index could be the most comprehens­ive assessment of wildlife numbers in Canada.

The organizati­on looked at 3,689 different population­s of 386 kinds of birds, 365 fish species, 106 different mammals and 46 reptiles and amphibians. It combined more than 400 data sets from government, academe, industry and citizen science using a peer-reviewed method developed by the Zoological Society of London.

Overall numbers for all 903 species decreased by eight per cent over the 44 years studied.

A total of 45 species were stable and 407 increased. Many of those benefited from large-scale conservati­on measures.

Waterfowl, which increased by 54 per cent, have enjoyed widespread wetland preservati­on. Birds such as falcons are no longer harmed by DDT and grew by 88 per cent.

Others on the increase were generalist species such as deer or geese that live well alongside humans.

The survey found a familiar combinatio­n of reasons for declining population­s: habitat loss, climate change, invasive species and pollution.

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