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Victoria Gill
A third of all the lemur species on Earth are “one step from extinction”.
This is according to the latest update of the Red List, the comprehensive, continually updated report on the status of species.
Human activities, particularly deforestation and hunting, drive the declines in these unique primates.
Such habitat destruction has also been linked to an increased risk of wildlife diseases – like the coronavirus – spilling over into human populations.
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Russell A. Mittermeier
The update shows that 33 lemur species – primates unique to Madagascar – are now classified as Critically Endangered, with 103 of the 107 surviving species threatened with extinction. Thirteen lemur species have been “uplisted” – pushed to higher threat categories as a result of these “intensifying human pressures”.
Craig Hilton-Taylor from the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which produces the list, told BBC News that the current pandemic should give us pause to “ask some difficult questions about our relationship with the natural world”.
“We need to look to nature to provide future solutions to human problems – like treatments for disease and food supplies,” Dr Hilton-Taylor added.
“Nature has a huge amount to offer us, but if we continue to impact the natural world as we’re doing – and if we lose species like lemurs – then our chances of looking to nature for those solutions is reduced dramatically.”
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Updates to the list are based on the latest scientific assessments. There are now more than 120,000 different species that have been assessed, with 120,372 species now listed and, of these, 32,441 are threatened with extinction.
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Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life
Other species that have been “uplisted” include:
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Mathilde Tissier
There are some conservation success stories in the latest list. A little known species of iguana native to the Turks and Caicos Islands has been “downlisted” from Critically Endangered to Endangered, meaning it is no longer at immediate threat of extinction.
That is entirely, Craig Hilton-Taylor said, because of a concerted conservation effort on the islands, involving the government, NGOs and local people – restoring habitat and reintroducing the species.
“If people pull together, species can recover,” he added.
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