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Red List Finds 12,000 Species Endangered Worldwide
Tuesday, November 18, 2003

IUCN-The World Conservation Union has added another 2,000 species to its annual Red List of the world's most endangered animals and plants, bringing the number of imperiled species to more than 12,000, BBC Online reports.

Many native animals and plants on islands such as the Seychelles and the Galapagos are being driven to extinction by invasive species, the group says (Alex Kirby, BBC Online, Nov. 18).

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According to the Swiss-based intergovernmental organization, humans are largely to blame for the increased threat to island species, Reuters reports.

"Places such as the Galapagos, Hawaii and the Seychelles are famed for their beauty, their diversity of plants, animals and ecosystems," said Conservation Union Director General Achim Steiner. "But the Red List tells us that human activities are leading to a swath of extinctions that could make these islands ecologically and aesthetically barren" (Robert Evans, Reuters/Chicago Tribune, Nov. 18).

Species on the Atlantic islands of Tristan da Cunha, St. Helena and the Falkland Islands are also threatened by invaders, grazing animals and habitat loss, the group says.

In Hawaii, the native plant life faces a "grim" future because of invasive species, the loss of pollinators that evolved with native plants and human pressures.

Island species are not the sole victims. Continental species such as the Mexican black howler monkey, the variegated spider monkey and the pied tamarin are also now at risk.

The giant catfish of the Mekong basin, which can grow up to 10 feet long, has dropped in population by more than 80 percent since 1990 because of overfishing, habitat loss, and the blocking of its migration routes by dams.

Countries with the highest numbers of threatened birds and animals include Indonesia, India, Brazil, China and Peru, while plant life is most threatened in Ecuador, Malaysia, Indonesia, Brazil and Sri Lanka (Kirby, BBC Online).

These are all countries where industrialization, forest clearance and tourism have risen sharply in recent decades (Evans, Reuters/Chicago Tribune).

Copyright, National Journal Group, Year 2003 .

 
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