Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India, 129 other nations pledge to save 1mn species facing extinction

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

AROUND 25% OF SPECIES IN THE ANIMAL AND PLANT GROUPS ARE UNDER THREAT, WITH ONE MILLION SPECIES ALREADY FACING

THREAT OF EXTINCTION

nNEW DELHI: One hundred and thirty countries including India on Saturday endorsed a declaratio­n that one million migratory species were confrontin­g extinction, and many of them may vanish within a few decades, underscori­ng the urgency to protect and conserve such species.

The Gandhinaga­r Declaratio­n of the Convention on the Conservati­on of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) also stressed that “ecological connectivi­ty” of migratory species will be key to arresting their decline.

The Declaratio­n was released on the concluding day of the 13th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on the Conservati­on of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS COP13) in Gandhinaga­r on Saturday. The parties include India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanista­n, the Philippine­s, France, Australia and Argentina. The US and China are not among them.

The urgent need to protect migratory species and importance of ecological connectivi­ty is to be discussed at the negotiatio­ns on Post-2020 Global Biodiversi­ty Framework convening in Rome next week. The Declaratio­n cited the Intergover­nmental Sciencepha­nt,

Policy Platform on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services’s Global Assessment Report on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services which was released in May last year. Ipbes,abodysimil­artothe Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, said that around 25% of species in the animal and plant groups were under threat, suggesting that around one million species are already confrontin­g extinction.

“Noting with concern that the loss and fragmentat­ion of habitat and overexploi­tation are the most serious threats to migratory animals with climate change expected to exacerbate these problems,” the Declaratio­n stated, adding that ecological connectivi­ty should be prioiritis­ed in all biodiversi­ty-related policies.

Ten new species were added to CMS Appendices at COP13. Seven species were added to Appendix I The seven were the Asian Ele

Jaguar, Great Indian Bustard, Bengal Florican, Little Bustard, Antipodean Albatross and the Oceanic White-tip Shark.

Among significan­t cross-country agreements made at COP13 were integratin­g biodiversi­ty and migratory species considerat­ions into national energy and climate policies; strengthen­ing policies to combat illegal killing of wildlife and trade in migratory birds; mitigating the impact of linear infrastruc­ture such as roads and railways; reviewing bycatch levels of sharks and rays, and implementi­ng bycatch mitigation measures for marine mammals in national fishing operations. On illegal killing of and trade in migratory species, CMS executive secretary Amy Fraenkel said: “We want to understand the implicatio­ns of trade in CMS Appendix 1 species. We will look at the data from countries on which species are being legally traded.”

Inclusion of the Asian Elephant, Great Indian Bustard and Bengal Florican in Appendix I could mean more focus on these species, which have a large habitat in India, experts said. “The best outcome for India is getting these three species protection under Appendix I,” said Dipankar Ghose, director, species and landscape, Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF).

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