Albuquerque Journal

Report: Wildlife declined by 60 percent

Human activity said to blame in decrease over the past 40 years

- BY FRANK KUMMER THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER

The World Wildlife Fund has released a report saying it has found an “astonishin­g” 60 percent decline in wildlife population­s globally over the last 40 years, mostly due to human activity, including climate change and habitat loss.

“This report sounds a warning shot across our bow. Natural systems essential to our survival — forests, oceans, and rivers — remain in decline. Wildlife around the world continue to dwindle,” said Carter Roberts, president and chief executive officer of WWF-US. “It reminds us we need to change course. It’s time to balance our consumptio­n with the needs of nature, and to protect the only planet that is our home.”

The group’s biennial report, released Monday, said it measured trends in 16,704 population­s of 4,005 species of birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians and fish. The biggest declines were among creatures that live in fresh water, which faced an even bigger 83 percent drop. South and Central America were hit hardest as rain forests shrank, with 20 percent of the Amazon disappeari­ng.

“Humanity and the way we feed, fuel, and finance our societies and economies is pushing nature and the services that power and sustain us to the brink,” the report states.

Human activity has had an impact on oceans, forests, coral reefs, wetlands and mangroves, the report says. The globe has lost about half its shallow-water corals in the last 30 years.

“From rivers and rain forests, to mangroves and mountainsi­des, across the planet our work shows that wildlife abundance has declined dramatical­ly since 1970,” said Ken Norris, director of science at the Zoological Society of London, which provided one of three indexes used to write the report. “The statistics are scary, but all hope is not lost. We have an opportunit­y to design a new path forward that allows us to coexist sustainabl­y with the wildlife we depend upon. Our report sets out an ambitious agenda for change.”

As an example of the trend, Temple University biologist S. Blair Hedges reported Tuesday in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences that he and a team of researcher­s had found a near-total loss of Haiti’s primary forest and a mass extinction of species.

Hedges and his colleagues scrutinize­d aerial photograph­y and Landsat images from 1988 to 2016, finding that forests covered 4.4 percent of Haiti’s land in 1988. That plunged to 0.32 percent by 2016.

John Cecil, vice president for stewardshi­p at New Jersey Audubon, said that he had not yet seen the World Wildlife Fund report, but that it was in line with previous research.

“We’re finding a broad decline in species across the board,” Cecil said, noting exceptions, such as white-tailed deer and Canada geese. “There are a lot of species out there not threatened with immediate extinction, but compared to 50 or 100 years ago, their population­s have declined dramatical­ly.”

Previously, habitat loss was by far the biggest driver of species loss, he said. Now, he cites climate change and invasive species as among the top reasons. Both alter the habitat, for example, of birds who can no longer find the insects they once fed on or plant life they depended on because “they’re all interconne­cted.”

“The birds are failing where the non-native species are taking over,” Cecil said. “We’re seeing major changes. These global trends are consistent in the United States and East Coast.”

More positively, the World Wildlife Fund report said habitat restoratio­n and other actions have worked, citing population increases in giant pandas, mountain gorillas and endangered dolphins.

It singled out the U.S. Endangered Species Act of 1973 as helping “an estimated 99 percent of listed species avoid extinction.”

 ?? KATIE FALKENBERG/TNS ?? A gorilla in the Republic of the Congo, one of the species that have declined in the past several decades, according to a World Wildlife Fund report.
KATIE FALKENBERG/TNS A gorilla in the Republic of the Congo, one of the species that have declined in the past several decades, according to a World Wildlife Fund report.

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