http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20021008/sc_nm/environment_extinction_dc_1


News Story - More Than 11,000 Plants, Animals Face
Extinction
 GENEVA (Reuters) - 
'Some 11,170 plant and animal species face extinction,
including a European lynx that could become the first
wild cat species to have disappeared for thousands of
years, a major conservation group said Tuesday.  The
Swiss-based World Conservation Union (IUCN) also
sounded the alarm about the saiga, a nomadic antelope
of Central Asia whose population has dropped by more
than 90 percent in just 10 years due to poaching.

The IUCN's "Red List of Threatened Species" says
Indonesia, India, Brazil and China are home to the
most threatened mammals and birds, while plant species
are declining rapidly in South and Central America,
Central and West Africa, and Southeast Asia.  Some 124
species, mainly plants, have joined the threatened
list since it was last issued in September 2000.

At the same time, two species believed extinct have
been "rediscovered."  They are the Lord Howe Island
stick insect, which was previously thought to have
disappeared from the Australian island in 1920, and
the Bavarian pine vole, the IUCN said.

The population of Iberian lynx, which numbered 1,200
in the early 1990s, has dropped to less than half in
the wake of efforts to control rabbits, its main prey,
in Spain and Portugal.

"There are fewer than 20 Iberian lynx in Portugal, it
is really on its way out there and will be very soon
in Spain," Peter Jackson, of the IUCN's cat specialist
group, told Reuters.

The IUCN said that although several sub species of
wild
cat, including a number of tigers, have disappeared,
the Iberian lynx would be the first full species to
die out since humans began keeping any kind of record
more than 2,000 years ago.

Habitats with the highest number of threatened mammals
and birds are lowland and mountain tropical
rainforest. Freshwater habitats are also extremely
vulnerable with many threatened fish, reptile,
amphibian and invertebrate species.

The IUCN's information comes from a network of 7,000
experts and data from partner groups including
BirdLife
International.'


There are many links from this page re: species
survival (or lack thereof), but some may yet
resurface.
The 'Tasmanian tiger' is among the other animals
rumored to still exist (from the CSM article):
"Unconfirmed sightings of this 65-pound predatory
marsupial � shaped like a dog and striped on its
hindquarters like a zebra � have persisted. The most
credible was in 1982, when a forest ranger in
northwest Tasmania claims to have spotted a thylacine
in his truck's headlights."

Humanoid Impact Maru

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