In its latest accounting, the International Union for Conservation of Nature finds that more than 44,000 species worldwide are threatened with extinction.
In its latest accounting, the International Union for Conservation of Nature finds that more than 44,000 species worldwide are threatened with extinction. Of these, nearly 7,000 face an immediate threat from climate change.
“Species around the world are under huge pressure,” Craig Hilton-Taylor, of IUCN, said in a statement. “So no matter where you look, the numbers of threatened species are rising.” This year, the organization tracked 157,000 species for its Red list, finding that climate change poses a growing threat to wildlife. At particular risk are freshwater fish, such as Atlantic salmon, which are now classified as “Near Threatened.”
Among all freshwater fish, some 25 percent are threatened with extinction, a trend driven in part by rising sea levels, which are pushing saltwater up rivers. Among amphibians, 41 percent are threatened with extinction, owing partly to more intense heat and drought, experts say.
Read more at: Yale Environment 360
Atlantic salmon are increasingly imperiled by climate change. (Photo Credit: Matt Hintsa via Flickr)