Over 17,000 species threatened by extinction
By FRANK JORDANS
Associated Press Writer
GENEVA (AP) - A rare Panamanian tree frog, a rodent from
Madagascar and two lizards found only in the Philippines are among
over 17,000 species threatened with extinction, a leading
environmental group said Tuesday.
The Rabb's fringe-limbed tree frog, only discovered four years
ago, is one of 1,895 amphibian species that could soon disappear
from the wild because of deforestation and infection, the
International Union for Conservation of Nature said.
The Switzerland-based group surveyed 47,677 animals and plants
for this year's ``Red List'' of endangered species, determining
that 17,291 of them are at risk of extinction.
More than one in five of all known mammals, over a quarter of
reptiles and 70 percent of plants are under threat, according to
the survey, which featured over 2,800 new species compared with
2008.
``These results are just the tip of the iceberg,'' said Craig
Hilton-Taylor, who manages the list. He said many more species that
have yet to be assessed could also be under serious threat.
The only mammal added to the list this year was the Eastern
Voalavo, a rodent that lives in the mountainous forests of
Madagascar. IUCN classified it as ``endangered'' - two steps from
extinction in the wild - because its habitat is being destroyed by
slash-and-burn farming.
The Red List already includes species such as the tiger, of
which only 3,200 are thought to exist in the wild and whose habitat
in Asia is steadily shrinking due to encroachment by humans.
Governments and international conservation bodies use the list as
guidance when deciding which species to place under legal
protection.
The group added almost 300 reptiles this year, including the
Panay monitor lizard and the sail-fin water lizard, both of which
are hunted for food and threatened by logging in their native
Philippines.
IUCN also surveyed 3,120 freshwater fishes, up 510 species from
last year, and found 1,147 of them threatened with extinction. They
include the brown mudfish in New Zealand, whose wetland habitats
have been virtually destroyed through drainage schemes, irrigation
and land development.
Some species have recovered thanks to conservation efforts, the
group said. The Australian grayling, a freshwater fish, graduated
from ``vulnerable'' to ``near threatened'' thanks to fish ladders
at dams and other protection measures.
But for many other species, conservation efforts are likely to
come too late.
The Kihansi spray toad of southern Tanzania is now thought to be
extinct in the wild. A dam upstream of Kihansi Falls has dried up
the gorge where it lived, and an aggressive fungal disease known as
chytridiomycosis appears to have pushed the toad population over
the edge, the group said.
The same fate could soon befall the unusually large Rabb's
fringe-limbed tree frog, which glides through the forest using its
big webbed feet to steer safely to the ground. It is the only known
frog species where the tadpoles feed off skin shed by the male
while he guards the young.
The chytrid fungus that causes chytridiomycosis reached central
Panama in 2006, a year after scientists first discovered the tree
frog. Since then the fungus - believed to be spread by
international trade and global warming - has virtually wiped out
the wild frog population.
``Only a single male has been heard calling since,'' IUCN said.
Zoo Atlanta scientist Joseph Mendelson, part of the group that
identified the frog as a distinct species, said it is likely that
dozens or even hundreds of other amphibians have become or are
going to be extinct before they are even discovered.
``This one we caught right before it went off the planet, but
other species surely we didn't catch in time,'' Mendelson told The
Associated Press in a telephone interview.
``When you name a new species you're attached to it, and when
that species disappears so quickly it's impossible not to have
feelings associated with that,'' he said. ``I'm pretty sad to be
honest, really sad.''
On the Net:
IUCN Red List: http://www.iucnredlist.org/
11/03/09 08:38
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