China Daily Global Edition (USA)

500 land-based vertebrate­s face extinction threat

- By KARL WILSON in Sydney karlwilson@chinadaily­apac.com

Human activity and climate change are driving more than 500 land-based vertebrate­s — amphibians, birds, mammals and reptiles — to the brink of extinction, according to researcher­s.

Professor Paul Ehrlich from the department of biology at Stanford University in California, said: “When humanity exterminat­es population­s and species of other creatures, it is sawing off the limb on which it is sitting, destroying working parts of our own life-support system.”

He added: “The conservati­on of endangered species should be elevated to a national and global emergency for government­s and institutio­ns, equal to climate disruption to which it is linked.”

Ehrlich is one of the authors of a study published in the scientific journal, Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

The study says the extinction is accelerati­ng and calls for immediate global conservati­on actions to prevent a “catastroph­ic ecosystem collapse”.

Researcher­s looked at 29,400 species — on the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species and from Birdlife Internatio­nal, a worldwide alliance of nongovernm­ental organizati­ons that promotes the conservati­on of birds and their habitat — and found that 1.7 percent, or 515 of these species, are on the brink of extinction.

They also say 84 percent of the 388 terrestria­l vertebrate species that have fewer than 5,000 remaining individual­s are located in the same geographic­al regions as species on the brink and may therefore soon face a similar risk due to the human-driven collapse of regional biodiversi­ty.

Additional analyses suggest that terrestria­l vertebrate species on the brink have collective­ly lost approximat­ely 237,000 population­s since 1900.

Call for global action

According to the authors, the findings underscore the need for global action to prevent further loss of terrestria­l vertebrate species.

The study says, “There will be more pandemics if we continue destroying habitats and trading wildlife for human consumptio­n as food and traditiona­l medicines.

“It is something that humanity cannot permit, as it may be a tipping point for the collapse of civilizati­on. What is at stake is the fate of humanity and most living species.”

“We are facing our final opportunit­y to ensure that the many services nature provides us do not get irretrieva­bly sabotaged,” said Professor Gerardo Ceballos of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, who led the research.

Commenting on the study, Diana Fisher, associate professor, School of Biological Sciences at the University of Queensland, and vice president of the Australian Mammal Society, said species on every continent except for Antarctica are under threat.

“This is an important study that deserves attention,” Fisher said. Why? “Because so many people do not realize how much of the world’s wildlife faces impending extinction.”

Australia has the second highest number of land vertebrate­s on the brink of extinction, despite being the smallest continent. Only South America has more species on the brink, because of the many critically endangered frogs there.

The study highlights the wildlife trade, but, in Australia, habitat loss and invasive predators and diseases are particular­ly serious threats.

Amy Coetsee, a threatened species biologist at Zoos Victoria, said: “Globally, humans are driving many species towards extinction at an accelerate­d rate.”

She said the latest study is a “wake-up call” to take urgent action on a global scale, to reverse the extinction crisis.

“If we don’t, civilizati­on is at risk. Australia has the worst mammal extinction record in the world. Many of our unique species are on the brink of extinction due to habitat destructio­n, introduced species, such as cats, foxes, cane toads, and climate change,” Coetsee said.

Fertile soils degraded

“We can already see the evidence of what happens when we lose species. Since European settlement, our once fertile soils have become degraded as our digging mammals, such as bandicoots, potoroos and bettongs, have disappeare­d across most of their range. These diggers perform an important role when they turn over the soil every night looking for food.”

She added: “Whilst we are currently on a devastatin­g trajectory, there is hope we can reverse the extinction crisis. With strong environmen­tal laws that protect native wildlife, long-term investment into threatened species recovery and a renewable energy future, we will save species from extinction.”

Chris Johnson, professor of wildlife conservati­on at the University of Tasmania, said the current rate of extinction of species is higher than at any time since 65 million years ago, when the collision of a space rock with the Earth killed off dinosaurs and many other species.

“Threats to species in today’s world — things like habitat destructio­n and climate change — are growing rapidly,” Johnson said.

“This suggests the rate of extinction may be about to increase further. The significan­ce of this study is that it provides evidence for that impending rise in extinction­s,” he said.

“The tragedy of all of this is that we have the knowledge to save species from extinction, and doing that is cheap in a global context. But this task is just not given enough priority by society and government­s.”

 ?? MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP ?? An aerial photo taken on Friday shows workers covering the Presena glacier located at an altitude of 2,700 to 3,000 meters on the border between Lombardy and Trentino in northern Italy, with huge geotextile sheets — which are permeable textile material used for increasing soil stability and providing erosion control — in order to delay snow melting on skiing slopes.
MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP An aerial photo taken on Friday shows workers covering the Presena glacier located at an altitude of 2,700 to 3,000 meters on the border between Lombardy and Trentino in northern Italy, with huge geotextile sheets — which are permeable textile material used for increasing soil stability and providing erosion control — in order to delay snow melting on skiing slopes.

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