The Star Malaysia - Star2

Lurching towards extinction

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TRAPPED on island habitats made smaller by rising seas, Indonesia’s Komodo dragons were listed as “endangered” on Saturday (Sept 4), in an update of the wildlife Red List that also warned that overfishin­g threatens nearly two in five sharks with extinction.

About 28% of the 138,000 species assessed by the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) are now at risk of vanishing in the wild forever, as the destructiv­e impact of human activity on the natural world deepens.

But the latest update of the Red List for Threatened Species also highlights the potential for restoratio­n, with four commercial­ly fished tuna species pulling back from a slide towards extinction after a decade of efforts to curb over-exploitati­on.

The most spectacula­r recovery was seen in Atlantic bluefin tuna, which leapt from “endangered” across three categories to the safe zone of “least concern”.

The species, a mainstay of highend sushi in Japan, was last assessed in 2011.

“This shows that conservati­on works – when we do the right thing, a species can increase,” said Jane Smart, global director of IUCN’S Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on Group.

“But we must remain vigilant. This doesn’t mean we can have a free-for-all of fishing for these tuna species.”

Clarion call

A key message from the IUCN Congress, which took place in the French city of Marseille Sept 3-11, is that disappeari­ng species and the destructio­n of ecosystems are existentia­l threats on a par with global warming.

And climate change itself is threatenin­g the futures of many species, particular­ly endemic animals and plants that live on small islands or in certain biodiversi­ty hotspots.

Komodo dragons, the largest living lizards, are found only in the World Heritage-listed Komodo National Park and neighbouri­ng Flores.

The species “is increasing­ly threatened by the impacts of climate change” said the IUCN: rising sea levels are expected to shrink its tiny habitat at least 30% over the next 45 years.

Outside of protected areas, the fearsome throwbacks are also rapidly losing ground as humanity’s footprint expands.

“The idea that these prehistori­c animals have moved one step closer to extinction due in part to climate change is terrifying,” said Andrew Terry, Conservati­on Director at the Zoological Society of London.

Their decline is a “clarion call for nature to be placed at the heart of all decision-making” at crunch UN climate talks in Glasgow (Nov 1-12), he added.

Alarming rate

The most comprehens­ive survey of sharks and rays ever undertaken, meanwhile, revealed that 37% of 1,200 species evaluated are now classified as directly threatened with extinction, falling into one of three categories: “vulnerable”, “endangered” or “critically endangered”.

That’s a third more species at risk than only seven years ago, said Simon Fraser University Professor Nicholas Dulvy, lead author of a study published on Monday (Sept 6) underpinni­ng the Red List assessment.

“The conservati­on status of the group as a whole continues to deteriorat­e, and overall risk of extinction is rising at an alarming rate,” he told AFP.

Five species of sawfish – whose serrated snouts get tangled in castoff fishing gear – and the iconic shortfin mako shark are among those most threatened.

Chondricht­hyan fish, a group made up mainly of sharks and rays, “are important to ecosystems, economies and cultures,” said Sonja Fordham, president of Shark Advocates Internatio­nal and co-author of the upcoming study.

“By not sufficient­ly limiting catch, we’re jeopardisi­ng ocean health and squanderin­g opportunit­ies

for sustainabl­e fishing, tourism, traditions and food security in the long term.”

The Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on reports some 800,000 tonnes of sharks caught – intentiona­lly or opportunis­tically – each year, but research suggests the true figure is two to four times greater.

Conservati­on tracker

The IUCN on Saturday (Sept 4) also officially launched its “green status”, the first global standard for assessing species recovery and measuring conservati­on impacts.

“It makes the invisible work of conservati­on visible,” Molly Grace, a professor at the University of Oxford and Green Status co-chair, told a press conference the same day.

Efforts to halt extensive declines in numbers and diversity of animals and plants have largely failed.

In 2019 the UN’S biodiversi­ty experts warned that a million species are on the brink of extinction, raising the spectre that the planet is on the verge of its sixth mass extinction event in 500 million years.

The IUCN Congress is widely seen as a testing ground for a UN treaty – to be finalised at a summit in Kunming, China, next May – to save nature.

“We would like to see that plan call for the halt to biodiversi­ty loss by 2030,” said Smart.

A cornerston­e of the new global deal could be setting aside 30% of Earth’s land and oceans as protected areas, she added.

 ?? — afp ?? the Komodo dragon has now been listed as ‘endangered’ in an update of the wildlife red List.
— afp the Komodo dragon has now been listed as ‘endangered’ in an update of the wildlife red List.

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