Orange-bellied parrot, Eastern Australia: critically endangered |
The latest 'Red List of Threatened Species' assessment released in June 2013 by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) continues to paint a bleak picture for the future of most of the planet's animal life. The Red List is not about climate change impact as the methodology and process was established long before the current global warming issue came to mainstream public debate. The assessment remains grim with 24 to 50 per cent of species being hihghly vulnerable, 22 to 44 per cent of amphibians and 15 to 32 per cent of corals - the lower estimate being the most optimistic and higher figure being the most pessimistic.
In a separate study which specifically addresses the impact of climate change, species which are at the greatest risk from climate change are not currently conservation
priorities. The IUCN paper, published in the
journal PLOS ONE, is one of the largest studies of its kind, assessing all of the world’s birds, amphibians and
corals. It draws on the work of more than 100 scientists over a period of five
years. Up to 83% of birds, 66% of
amphibians and 70% of corals that were identified as highly vulnerable to the
impacts of climate change are not currently considered threatened with
extinction. They are therefore
unlikely to be receiving focused conservation attention, according to the
study.
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