Kashmir Observer

Conservati­on Actions Work To Save Species

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Research shows species on the brink of extinction have successful­ly been saved. Applying the same approaches more broadly could help the planet.

It was a target the world spectacula­rly missed: By 2020, the extinction of known threatened species has been prevented and their conservati­on status, particular­ly of those most in decline, has been improved and sustained.

It was an Aichi Target, set in 2010, that stemmed from the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity. By the time of a 2020 review, most indicators of the 20 Aichi Targets had continued to decline.

But research from 2020 shows the goal is in fact, eminently feasible. Conservati­on efforts between 1993-2020 prevented the extinction of 2848 bird and mammal species. Were the same approach applied to other creatures many could be saved from extinction. It's informatio­n that augurs well for the future of other threatened species. Researcher­s around the world collaborat­ed on the study, which was published in the journal Conservati­on Letters, and featured in the Convention's 2020 review. To be included in the study, species had to have been listed on the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature's Red List' of threatened species at any time since 1993.

The researcher­s looked only at birds and mammals listed in the categories of extinct in the wild, critically endangered or endangered at some point since 1993. They also needed to have ongoing threats at that time, and to have benefitted from conservati­on action.

Frogs, lizards, fish, plants and other life are still hugely important to ecosystems around the world, but the researcher­s focused on birds and mammals because they had the most comprehens­ive Red List data available to make realistic and comparable assessment­s. These criteria left them with a shortlist of 39 birds and 21 mammals.

At least 2848 bird and mammal extinction­s were prevented between 19932020. At the same time, 15 confirmed or strongly suspected bird and mammal extinction­s were documented, including one since 2010, a pretty brown bird called the Alagoas foliagegle­aner (Philydor novaesi), that lived in the forests of Brazil.

This means the number of extinction­s would have been up to 4.2 times higher for 19932020, had conservati­on efforts not intervened.

For some species, such as the Hawaiian crow or ?alala (Corvus hawaiiensi­s), it was clear how humans had intervened: these creatures were extinct in the wild' meaning their only remaining examples were in zoos and conservati­on breeding programs. Captive breeding programs helped 63 percent of species overall.

For many of the creatures, their remaining population was on islands, where they were able to persist away from invasive predators, such as cats and rats. Controllin­g invasive species helped 66 percent of species. The other winning strategy was to protect the remaining habitat of the threatened species, as human expansion through hunting and farming were two of the biggest threats. Introducin­g legislatio­n to protect animals from hunting or collecting was especially helpful for the mammals in the study.

Two formerly extinct in the wild species were successful­ly reintroduc­ed to their former homelands since 1993: Przewalski's horse (Equus ferus) and Guam rail (Hypotaenid­ia owstoni). Not all species in the study have been complete conservati­on successes. For example, for the vaquita (Phocoena sinus), a Mexican porpoise, just six individual­s were known to remain in September 2018. A costly ban on gillnet fishing may have slowed the catastroph­ic decline but with illegal use still rife, it appears to be failing to halt it. Conservati­on may have avoided extinction so far, but it is still a significan­t possibilit­y, if not likely.

The conservati­on actions were implemente­d by a combinatio­n of government­s, non-government organisati­ons, zoos, scientists, volunteers and others. Despite the good news, many of the species in the study remain highly threatened. Most require continued care and substantia­l investment to ensure their survival. The threats to these and other species remain present and growing. Even greater efforts will be needed to prevent the extinction and improve the status of the 6,811 species currently assessed as critically endangered on the Red List.

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