World on Track to Lose Two-Thirds of its Animal Population by 2020!

Dear Commons Community,

Various media news outlets are reporting on The World Wildlife Fund’s Living Planet Report which is ringing an alarm that the world’s animal species are dying, and humans are a big reason why.  The report estimates that global populations of wild mammals, fish, birds, amphibians and reptiles declined 58 percent on average between 1970 and 2012.  Broken down, those numbers look like this: Land animals have declined by 38 percent, marine species show a 36 percent drop and freshwater species have decreased 81 percent.

And it’s not stopping there. If 1970 is our baseline, the world is on track to lose an estimated two-thirds of its wild animal populations by 2020.

Experts are calling this time in history “the Anthropocene,” and these declining numbers for species are uncharted territory.

But the extinction rate shouldn’t be a surprise. Well-known species like eastern and western Gorillas are both critically endangered. Poaching is decimating elephant populations. And you can count the number of northern white rhinos on one hand.

It’s not just the highly publicized species, either. Vulture populations are reportedly headed for extinction, and even certain species of bees are disappearing.

The declines are caused by habitat loss from urban development, over-hunting, pollution, disease and climate change — all of which are tied to humans.

One expert in the report warned if we lose any more biodiversity, “the natural world and the life support systems as we know them today will collapse.”

2020 is only four years away!

Tony

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