Vanishing Species?
Think
the polar bear has it bad? Here are 10 critters that are even worse off
than our favorite threatened Arctic resident. Listed on the
International Union for Conservation of Nature's (IUCN) Red List as
critically endangered, meaning they face an extremely high risk of
extinction in the immediate future, these animals may not live to see
the end of the next decade without the a similar effort of human
intervention that brought them to the brink in the first place.
Credit: WWF-Canon/Alain Compost
Credit: WWF-Canon/Alain Compost
Sumatran Rhinoceros
The smallest of rhinoceroses (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)
used to flourish throughout the rain forests, cloud forests, and
swamps of India and Southeast Asia. Now critically endangered, only six
substantial populations remain in the wild, where they're estimated to
number around 300. The main culprits for their dwindling numbers?
Illegal poaching — their horns can fetch as much as $30,000 per
kilogram on the black market — and the rampant destruction of their
habitat in the name of human progress. Another reason the animals are
doomed: Zoos have found very little success breeding the rhinos in
captivity.
Credit: Earthwatch Institute
Credit: Earthwatch Institute
Western Gray Whale
Although the International Whaling Commission banned the hunting of gray whales in 1947, the Western Pacific population (Esrichtiius robustus)
never recovered from unchecked whaling in the 19th and early 20th
centuries: Out of the 100 western grays that remain, only 23 are
reproductive females. Their only known feeding ground off the
northeastern coast of Sakhalin Island in Russia has since been annexed
by oil companies whose exploration and mining activities, including
high-intensity seismic surveying, drilling operations, increased ship
and air traffic, and oil spills, are driving the 30-ton mammals to
extinction.
Credit: U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
Credit: U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
Red Wolf
Smaller and more slender than its gray-wolf cousin, the red wolf (Canis lupus rufus)
managed to survive the Late Pleistocene ice age but may not be able to
slink by modern man. Once widespread throughout the southeastern United
States, red wolf-populations have been so devastated by
predator-control programs and habitat loss that the dearth of breeding
partners has led many of them to mate with coyotes instead, further
reducing the number of genetically pure wolves. An estimated 100 wolves
roam northeastern North Carolina today, while another 150 reside at
captive breeding facilities across the United States. [Stunning Photos of Wolves]
Credit: stock.xchng
Credit: stock.xchng
Siberian Tiger
Also known as the Amur tiger, the Siberian tiger (Panthera tigris altaica),
whose former range included northeastern China, the Korean Peninsula,
and Mongolia, is now almost completely confined to Russia's Amur-Ussuri
region, where it is now protected. An estimated 350 to 450 tigers are
believed to be still alive, although the persistent threats of habitat
loss through logging and development, as well as poaching for their fur
and bones continue to loom overhead. [Gallery: Tiger Species of the World]
Credit: LuRay Parker, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Credit: stock.xchng
Credit: LuRay Parker, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Black-Footed Ferret
The only ferret native to North America, and one of the most endangered mammals on the continent, the black-footed ferret (Mustela nigripes)
teeters on the edge of extinction because human development has
reduced their grasslands habitat to less than 2 percent of its original
size. Because prairie dogs comprise 90 percent of a ferret's diet, the
destruction of prairie-dog colonies due to habitat destruction,
pest-elimination programs, and disease are huge contributors to the
ferret's downward spiral.
Credit: stock.xchng
Philippine Crocodile
Found only on the islands from which it derives its name, the freshwater Philippine crocodile (Crocodylus mindorensis)
is legally protected in its native country, although it continues to
face threats from human disturbance, including habitat loss and
accidental death by dynamite fishing. A 1995 survey found only 100
adult crocs left in the wild, making the animal one of the most
severely threatened species on the planet.
Credit: Wildlife Conservation Society
Credit: Warner Bros./Peter Kragh
Credit: Wildlife Conservation Society
Mountain Gorilla
Although mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringeiberingei)
managed to elude discovery until as late as 1902, their populations
have been so decimated by deforestation, hunting, and the illegal pet
trade that only 720 remain in the wild, split between Uganda's Bwindi
Impenetrable National Park and the Virunga range of volcanic mountains
on the borders of the Democratic Repulic of Congo, Rwanda, Uganda. Civil
unrest in central Africa, particularly in the Congo, add another
wrinkle in conservation efforts.
Credit: Warner Bros./Peter Kragh
Ganges Shark
This rare and elusive species of shark (Glyphis gangeticus)
makes its home in India's Ganges River, where it has a reputation as a
man-eater, although people may be confusing it with the more dangerous
bull shark. One of 20 sharks on the IUCN's Red List of endangered
species, the Ganges shark is highly sought after for its oil. Rampant
fishing, habitat degradation from pollution, and increasing river
utilization, however, remain the primary causes for its rapid
disappearance.
Credit: i359702,
Credit: i359702,
Sumatran Orangutan
The smaller and rarer of the two species of orangutans, the fruit- and insect-loving Sumatran orangutan (Pongo abelii)
is being pushed to imminent extinction by ... you guessed it ...
habitat loss and poaching. While orangutans live for roughly 45 years
in the wild, they also breed more slowly than other primates — a single
female produces no more than three offspring in her lifetime — which
means that orangutan populations grow slowly and are less tenacious
when it comes to recovering from external threats.
no photo
California Condor
A resident of the Grand Canyon area and the western coastal mountains of California, the carrion-eating California condor (Gymnogyps californianus)
has a lifespan of 50 years, making it one of the world's
longest-living birds. Because of poaching, lead poisoning, and habitat
loss, however, it's also one of the world's rarest bird species—one that
was almost wiped out completely in the 1980s. With the help of
conservation efforts, 332 condors are now known to exist, including 152
in the wild.
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