Albuquerque Journal

Not easy eating green: Study finds herbivores most at extinction risk

Invasive species, climate change and habitat loss are all factors

- BY SETH BORENSTEIN ASSOCIATED PRESS

Although scientists often worry most about the loss of the world’s predators, a comprehens­ive new study finds that plant-eating herbivores are the animals most at risk of extinction.

About one in four species of herbivores, 25.5%, are considered threatened, endangered or vulnerable by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN), the world’s scientific authority on extinction risk, according to a study in Wednesday’s journal Science Advances.

By comparison, 17.4% of the predators and 15.8% of omnivores were at risk, said study lead author Trisha Atwood, an ecologist at Utah State University.

Researcher­s analyzed data for 22,166 species of animals with backbones, including the type of animal (reptile, bird or mammal), geographic location, habitat and size. And in just about every way examined, they found plant-eaters were the most at risk, especially in forest ecosystems.

“The implicatio­ns for this are huge,” Atwood said. “We need to think about herbivores as being kind of the poster child of extinction.”

So, instead of polar bears and tigers, think of plant-eaters such as rhinos and green sea turtles, Atwood said. The last male northern white rhinoceros in the wild died in 2018, but scientists are scrambling to save the species with donor embryos.

The study focused on proportion­ality, not raw numbers of species at risk. There are many more predator species, so there are more vulnerable predators in total, but a larger share of herbivores are in trouble.

Scientists even examined the presumed diets of more than 2,000 species no longer alive and found that herbivores again had the highest extinction proportion.

Atwood went into the study thinking that the predators were most at risk. However, she said the data — which included land and water species, but not fish because of inadequate informatio­n — pointed clearly to herbivores.

Predators, she added, are also in trouble, but not as much as the herbivores they often eat.

Extinction causes — invasive species, climate change and habitat loss — hit herbivores harder than animals with other diets, Atwood said.

Size may be part of the reason herbivores are more at risk, the ecologist said. Herbivores are often bigger, need to eat more, require more land and their habitats are becoming smaller, she said. Predators and omnivores have wider ranges and that helps them survive.

 ?? BEN CURTIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The last two female northern white rhinos on the planet are fed carrots by a ranger at Ol Pejeta Conservanc­y in Kenya. Herbivores may become extinct sooner than predators.
BEN CURTIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS The last two female northern white rhinos on the planet are fed carrots by a ranger at Ol Pejeta Conservanc­y in Kenya. Herbivores may become extinct sooner than predators.

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