The Manila Times

Biggest and smallest creatures risk extinction

- AFP

MIAMI: Animals on both the large and small side of the spectrum face the most risk of extinction - but for very different reasons, each with vast consequenc­es for the planet, researcher­s said on Monday (Tuesday in Manila).

For big creatures - including whale sharks, Atlantic sturgeon, Somali ostriches, Chinese giant salamander­s and Komodo dragons - people are the top threat to their survival, said the study in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, a peer-reviewed US journal.

Large vertebrate­s - or animals hunted, trapped, poached or killed as unintentio­nal bycatch.

“Many of the larger species are being killed and consumed by humans,” said lead author William Ripple, a distinguis­hed professor of ecology at Oregon State University.

- ened species larger than 2.2 pounds [1 kilogram] in size are being threatened by harvesting,” he said.

Meanwhile, threats to the smallest animals - those weighing less than about three ounces (77 grams) - are also quite high, mainly due to loss of habitat.

Some of the most vulnerable little ones include the Clarke’s banana frog, sapphire-bellied hummingbir­d, gray gecko, hog-nosed bat and the waterfall climbing cave

“Small species that require freshwater habitats are especially imperilled,” Ripple said.

Losing the largest and smallest species can affect entire ecosystems.

Unless things change, humandrive­n activities will eliminate big and small creatures in such a way that “fundamenta­lly reorder[s] the structure of life on our planet,” said the report.

Knowing which creatures are at risk can help focus conservati­on efforts, researcher­s said.

The study was based on an examinatio­n of more than 27,000 vertebrate animal species assessed by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature’s Red List.

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