At the end of each year, wildlife ecologist David Steen compiles a list of critters that have likely gone extinct. The 2017 list includes a bat, cat, and multiple lizards, although other creatures may be gone for good -- we just don't know it yet.
Steen, an ecologist at Auburn University, started the annual extinction list in 2012 to establish a clear, reliable source for the planet's extinctions. Educating the public about the loss of species, in his view, is as important as it is dispiriting.
SEE ALSO: Trump slurps shark fin soup as U.S. works to remove itself from the shark fin trade"It is depressing, frankly, to think about all the creatures we will never see again but I think it is important for us to perceive extinction as a loss of actual species and not just numbers and rates," Steen said via email.
Steen notes that listing any particular species is "surprisingly tricky." Some species have disappeared from the wild, but are still kept alive in captive settings, like zoos. Some might have been gone for years, but we hadn't yet figured out or officially established they were gone. Others species have disappeared from entire regions of the world -- but could cling to existence elsewhere.
The fishing cat in Southeast Asia is a good example.
Researchers can't find any of these medium-sized cats on the island of Java in Indonesia where they were once abundant. They're likely now extinct across the entire nation, but Steen says "they persist in low numbers elsewhere."
Those cats are on Steen's list.
Island species, said Steen, are particularly "vulnerable to extinction and we are seeing a number of these animals blinking out." Once a predatory foreign species, such as a rat or snake, is introduced to an island, there's no place for native species to run.
On Christmas Island, northwest of Australia, three lizards -- Lister's gecko, the blue-tailed skink, Christmas Island forest skink -- and a bat are widely presumed to be gone. They also make Steen's list. Exotic, or non-native, species are a likely culprit, but perhaps not the only one.
Some scientists argue that we are now living during one of Earth's mass extinction events -- which would be the sixth known such occurrence. Regardless of how scientists define a "great extinction event," Steen notes that a significant extinction crisis is inarguably happening now.
"All the evidence points to us having a rapid and disproportionate effect on the species around us," he said. "It is not a stretch to say that we are living through the sixth great extinction."
Still, Steen believes it's important to give progress it's due -- in places where it's deserved. Conservation areas, both in the oceans and on land, are being established.
In November, Mexico designated North America’s largest ocean reserve, Revillagigedo Archipelago National Park in the Pacific Ocean. This 58,000 square miles of protected space is home to sharks, turtles, and hundreds of species of fish (dozens of which live nowhere else). Nothing can be legally fished here.
"There's a lot to be discouraged about," said Steen. "But when it comes to conservation, I try to perceive our progress as ‘two steps forward, one step back.'
"We will continue to lose species and their habitats, but we need to pay attention to all the new conservation areas that are established, the species we are reintroducing to their old habitats, and perhaps most importantly, the passionate people that are making it all possible."
文章
7
浏览
9
获赞
84
Portland bans facial recognition tech, despite Amazon's lobbying
The city of Portland just took the fight against facial recognition up a notch. Late Wednesday afterWindows 11 23H2 update: 3 new features coming to your PC
Microsoft officially dropped a new Windows 11 update on Tuesday. However, it's a minor one, so don'tGoogle Chrome may soon cover up your IP address
If you're not one of the approximately 3 billion people currently using Google's browser, a forthcomScammers weaponize iPhone 15 overheating issue to steal users' phones
Is your new iPhone part of Apple's iPhone 15 recall? It shouldn't be. Because there is no iPhone 15Use the new 'Close Friends' sticker for Instagram stories to prank followers
Now you can convince anyone they're on your Close Friends list. When Instagram released its Close FrSing, hum or say 'Happy Birthday' to any Google product. Wait for a cute surprise.
Happy birthday, Google! Thanks for the doodles!A quarter of a century ago, American computer scientiScientists discover mysterious deep sea creature. It hunts with a hood.
It dwells in the midnight zone. Scientists at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute identifie5 Internet
Internet memes shall never truly die, especially when they are immortalized in thread.Finding craft5 Great Chrome Extensions You Should Install
With almost 60 percent share of the browser market, Chrome is around three times more popular than iWebb and Hubble telescopes provide a preview to galactic cannibalism
Two spiral galaxies are on the precipice of a messy scuffle— a type of merger known as "galactElon Musk's X is reportedly selling usernames and handles for $50,000
As X struggles to make money and retain users, CEO Elon Musk is trying to balance his bottom line byBest Prime Day Dyson deals: Save on cordless vacuums and hair tools
UPDATE: Oct. 11, 2023, 11:45 a.m. EDT This story has been updated to reflect the latest deals on DysThere are four new iPhones. So which iPhone 12 should you buy?
Not long ago, Apple used to release just two new iPhones per year. That number has now ballooned allBest Prime Day headphones deal: 50% off Beats Solo3
SAVE OVER $90: Beats Solo3 wireless headphones are on sale for $99.99 in the Amazon Prime Big Deal DBest early Prime Day deals on gaming laptops: Look beyond Amazon
SAVE UP TO $1,200: We've compiled a running list of the best gaming laptop deals around the web ahea