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Today's Top News
Wildlife Extinction Rates 'Seriously Underestimated'
Endangered species may become extinct 100 times faster than previously thought, scientists warned today, in a bleak re-assessment of the threat to global biodiversity.
Writing in the journal Nature, leading ecologists claim that methods used to predict when species will die out are seriously flawed, and dramatically underestimate the speed at which some plants and animals will be wiped out.
The findings suggest that animals such as the western gorilla, the Sumatran tiger and the Malayan sun bear, the smallest of the bear family, may become extinct much sooner than conservationists feared.
Ecologists Brett Melbourne at the University of Colorado at Boulder and Alan Hastings at the University of California, Davis, said conservation organisations should use updated extinction models to urgently re-evaluate the risks to wildlife.
"Some species could have months instead of years left, while other species that haven't even been identified as under threat yet should be listed as endangered," said Melbourne.
The warning has particular implications for the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, which compiles an annual "red list" of endangered species. Last year, the list upgraded western gorillas to critically endangered, after populations of a subspecies were found to be decimated by Ebola virus and commercial trade in bush meat. The Yangtze river dolphin was listed as critically endangered, but is possibly already extinct.
The researchers analysed mathematical models used to predict extinction risks and found that while they included some factors that are crucial to predicting a species' survival, they overlooked others. For example, models took into account that some animals might die from rare accidents, such as falling out of a tree. They also included chance environmental threats, such as sudden heatwaves or rain storms that could kill animals off.
But Melbourne and Hastings highlighted two other factors that extinction models fail to include, the first being the proportion of males to females in a population, the second the difference in reproductive success between individuals in the group. When they factored these into risk assessments for species, they found the danger of them becoming extinct rose substantially.
"The older models could be severely overestimating the time to extinction. Some species could go extinct 100 times sooner than we expect," Melbourne said.
The researchers showed that the missing factors - the number of males to females, and variations in the number of offspring - were capable of causing unexpected, large swings in the size of a population, sometimes causing it to grow, but also increasing the risk that a population could crash and become extinct.
To test the new models, Melbourne's team studied populations of beetles in the laboratory. "The results showed the old models misdiagnosed the importance of different types of randomness, much like miscalculating the odds in an unfamiliar game of cards because you didn't know the rules," he said.
For some endangered species, such as mountain gorillas, conservationists could collect data on specific individuals and plug them into models to predict their chances of survival. "For many other species, like stocks of marine fish, the best biologists can do is to measure abundances and population fluctuations," Melbourne added.
Craig Hilton-Taylor, who manages the IUCN red list in Cambridge, said extinction estimates are often inadequate. "We are certainly underestimating the number of species that are in danger of becoming extinct, because there are around 1.8 million described species and we've only been able to assess 41,000 of those," he said.
The latest study could help refine models used to decide which species are put on the red list, he said. "We are constantly looking at how we evaluate extinction risk, and it may be they have hit on something that can help us," he said.
More than 16,000 species worldwide are currently threatened with extinction, according to a 2007 report from the IUCN. One in four mammal species, one in eight bird species and one in three amphibian species are on the organisation's red list. An updated list is due to be published in October.
Next week, the IUCN is expected to highlight the dire state of the world's corals after surveying the condition of more than 1,000 species around the world.
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2008

30 Comments so far
Show All'methods used to predict when species will die out are seriously flawed, and dramatically underestimate the speed at which some plants and animals will be wiped out'..........
must be the same method to predict the onslaught of global warming/climate change............they were wrong too.
If you have been to Borneo or Sumatra, you know the local ethnic groups don't give a damn about these animals (sun bear, tiger, orang-hutan) except as a source of food or income, and foreign do-gooders are resented, unless they provide income. So what to do?
For bubbahsouth: perhaps if the foreign do-gooders provide "carrots" to encourage local ethnic to preserve and protect these endangered creatures would help.
You are the patriarch of a very large, rich, and dependent family and you accidentally discover that your family's trust fund, which was being held by one of the most trusted institutions in the world, has been half spent.
You discuss this with many experts and discover that if you are to revert to just living on the interest (vs spending down the capital) your family is going to be living in poverty. You have a choice to make.
It is the same choice we have to make today. And we are making it every day, and the extinction crisis continues to grow.
Other species, poor people, and future generations don't get to vote.
for all the facts of this dismal situation see the prestigious WWF Living Planet Report at www.panda.org/livingplanet/
add mankind to the list
This is sad, it will take the earth millions of years to undo the damage we're doing to it.
What a terrible elegy. And on the eve of the orgy of self-congratulation of the biggest resource hogging, climate changing perpetrator of it all - the USA. Anyone else have a difficult time getting out of bed on the 4th of July?
"It's an unnerving thought that we may be the living universe's supreme achievement and its worst nightmare simultaneously." Bill Bryson,
Maybe one day, people will realize that human overpopulation and extreme money-power concentration are the culprits and do something about it. In the meantime, wouldn't the 850 or so remaining gorillas, and the remaining tigers, sun bears and other endangered species be safer in zoos? Genetic diversity must be preserved, or they would die anyway.
www.wwf.org
Well, no surprise that extinctions are faster then expected. It is just like the comment, "must be the same method to predict the onslaught of global warming/climate change…………they were wrong too."
It is true that both were/are wrong, but they are both wrong in the same way. Both groups of scientists have totally underestimated how rapidly we would experience both extinction and global warming/climate change. When taken together it appears that Aesop was right. We can not resist killing the goose (the earth) that lays—gives us all of the wealth we have.
Yet, as I said this should be no surprise. Despite the demonizing and attempts to discredit by some, scientists are always careful and conservative in their claims. Too conservative!
Between the conservative assertions of the scientist and the clamoring of those who would destroy the world for another dollar, the American public has missed seeing the truth by a mile. Something for which we will all pay dearly!
This problem, species extinctions and rates of extinctions, is related to all the other problems that are currently plaguing the world, and, if we are lucky, in the news. Food shortage, rising price of gas/oil, global warming... They are all the product of a species, and in particular, those members of the species in one specific place on the globe (hint: North America) use-it-once-then-throw-it-away mentality. We can moan and groan about how terrible it is that our closest relatives, species-wise, the gorillas, are close to extinction, but how many of us are actually doing something about it and encouraging others to follow suit? I include myself in that assessment as I don't think I am doing enough...
I find it ironic that we value species. And count numbers and put them on lists.
And continue cutting down the forests, drilling wells, and decimating the environment.
Don't save the species. Save the habitat. The species will survive if you just make most of the undisturbed land off limits to humans. Simple. But no, large multinational corporations have to grow their profits and pay off their politicians. We provided a great model for the world to follow and follow they did. Consume consume and decimate the remaining wilds. Palm plantations in Indonesia, sugar cane plantations in Brazil for ethanol, sprawling subdivisions in the U.S. When will a politician stop the madness.
Jon
Bill Bryson, I believe it is a serious and human centric flaw to view humans as "the living universe's supreme achievement", the only criteria in that analysis are provided by us, the species with unbeatable powers of destruction. If any other creatures got to vote, I doubt the consensus would reflect that opinion. Remember the quote, "history is written by the victors"? Humans, for now, are the victors and for some very skewed reason, we get to say that we are the most important, the most valuable. Is a Beethoven symphony really more important than a Brown Thrashers 2000 songs? And isn't that just because WE say so.
How long will we last. I hope we die out soon. I know that we won't be missed. Even the rats and cockroaches are fed up.
"... an unprecedented mass extinction of life on Earth is occurring....There have always been periods of extinction in the planet's history, but this episode of species extinction is greater than anything the world has experienced for the past 65 million years-the greatest rate of extinction since the vanishing of the dinosaurs." - United Nations Environment Programme "Key Facts on Biodiversity"
"The current massive degradation of habitat and extinction of species is taking place on a catastrophically short timescale, and their effects will fundamentally reset the future evolution of the planet's biota." National Academy of Science
"The Father of All Mass Extinctions. There is a good possibility that losses in diversity in the present will surpass anything in the geological past. Facing that specter could shake the very tenets of conservation" - Peter Ward
"We know that the Earth will not be mocked. Even now nature is lashing back at us and taking its revenge." - Catholic Bishops of the Philippines
"...the accelerated loss of biodiversity, the destruction of natural habitats, the pollution of and damage to eco-systems, and the general environmental erosion, damage and degradation, not to speak of the wide scale oppression suffered by many of the world's inhabitants, are all from the manifest signs of corruption and villainy in the earth." - The Creation of an Environmental Conscience (part 4 of 4): God's Green Earth
"We all see that today man can destroy the foundation of his existence, his Earth... Our Earth is talking to us and we must listen to it and decipher its message if we want to survive," - Pope Benedict XVI in Lorenzago Di Cadore, Italy 2007
"The most profound and serious indication of the moral implications underlying the ecological problem is the lack of respect for life, ..." - His Holiness Pope John Paul II for the Celebration of the World Day of Peace
"Peace and the survival of life on earth as we know it are threatened by human activities which lack a commitment to humanitarian values. Destruction of nature and natural resources results from ignorance, greed and lack of respect for the earth's living things. " - The Dalai Lama
"If we are going to save this planet we need to seek a new ecological order, to look at the life we lead and then work together for the benefit of all; unless we work together no solution can be found. By moving away from self-centeredness, sharing wealth more, being more responsible for ourselves, and agreeing to live more simply, we can help decrease much of the suffering in the world." - Buddhist Faith Statement, ARC
more... www.oneplanetonelife.com
Nice quotes, SikWilly. I just wish that the Catholic leaders listed would acknowledge the role of human overpopulation in all of this. Assuming that they are well-intentioned and generally intelligent, and I do, how can they miss the obvious?
Vanishing Species - did the Greek philosopher Diogenes ever find an Honest Man?
Speaking of extinction- I understand there will be a massive die-off of elephants in the United States this November.
You can not expect a westernized human to understand extinction. Most urban people see animals as a source of food, products, entertainment and companionship. Gorillas, bears and tigers are not within their proximity and are deemed exotic and out of their care.
If you want to get most urbanites in an uproar about species extinction then tell them about how the fur trade can no longer provide mink, or fox skins. Tell them that the beef industry can no longer provide safe meat or that leather is no longer available. Tell them that all of their favorite seafood has been over harvested and the oceans are now lifeless. You can't explain extinction to an urbanite until the zoos are empty, then they may begin to understand.
Extinction is temporary. Give this planet a couple of hundred thousand years without us and the natural process will reset itself. For some reason I think that this may not have been the first time humans have devastated this planet. Earth will bounce back once our numbers decrease again.
This happens in nature all of the time. When food is plentiful the population increases. When food is scarce the population decreases and some of the remaining species migrate to find food. The process then repeats itself, species diversify, regeneration re-growth and evolution...
As a species, I would not be surprised that we have a lot in common with rats, cockroaches, and ants. The number of individuals may very well crash, but a reduction of 30dB (to 7 million left) would leave a very viable population genetically. The way money works, however, many of the survivors (the rich) would know little of how to really survive in tough times.
This story falls into the 'no shit sherlock' category.
Yea,I bet it has,seriously.What will stop it,fewer humans as if a magic wand will make us disappear?I hope so.
MENOS POBLACION
nah, i think it's dinosaurs.................
www.planetextinction.com
I was in Belize earlier this year, and that is a country where locals are very concerned about their natural resources and make sure they are preserved.
Why? Because they are a source of income for them through eco-turism. I think this a win-win situation since their livelihood depends on the preservation of their environment. If we could encourage those locals in Sumatra and Borneo to do the same it would be great news for those species.
I was in Belize earlier this year, and that is a country where locals are very concerned about their natural resources and make sure they are preserved.
Why? Because they are a source of income for them through eco-turism. I think this a win-win situation since their livelihood depends on the preservation of their environment. If we could encourage those locals in Sumatra and Borneo to do the same it would be great news for those species.
I was in Belize earlier this year, and that is a country where locals are very concerned about their natural resources and make sure they are preserved.
Why? Because they are a source of income for them through eco-turism. I think this a win-win situation since their livelihood depends on the preservation of their environment. If we could encourage those locals in Sumatra and Borneo to do the same it would be great news for those species.
Amidst all this despair, I think it's important to remember every moment of every day how incredibly blessed we are just to be alive and to experience this amazing planet we call home. This is from a blog entry I wrote about part of what keeps me going every day when faced with news such as this and the harsh reality of what my kind continues to do to this planet. The link to the entire piece is below.
" "It never ends . . ." And there in lies the beauty of it. The Earth continues its path around the sun, the days get longer and shorter, warmer and colder, and the plants and animals carry on their fascinating business through the seasons year after year. No matter what goes on in my life – life goes on around me, never ceasing . . . to amaze me.
This is what gives me hope, day in and day out. When I despair over human arrogance and our destruction and abuse of the world that supports us and the fellow beings with which we share this Earth, I remember that no matter what humans may do to the planet, and long after we may have destroyed ourselves and taken so many other unfortunate species along with us, life will still go on. Undoubtedly differently than before, because of and in spite of our human footprint, but it will still go on. We may end, but life itself never will."
http://www.lanternbooks.com/blog/entry.php?id=503
Earth is dying. You are dying. I am dying...