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Cayman Islands Ghost Orchid listed in 100 Most Threatened Species

Cayman Islands Ghost Orchid

From OurAmazingPlanet Staff

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s Species Survival Commission has issued its first ever list of what it considers the 100 most threatened species of animals, plants and fungi on the planet. The full list is below, including the scientific and common names (if one exists) of each species:

Scientific Name Common Name
Abies beshanzuensis Baishan Fir
Actinote zikani
Aipysurus foliosquama Leaf scaled sea-snake
Amanipodagrion gilliesi Amani Flatwing
Antilophia bokermanni Araripe Manakin
Antisolabis seychellensis Seychelles earwig
Aphanius transgrediens
Aproteles bulmerae Bulmer’s Fruit Bat
Ardea insignis White bellied heron
Ardeotis nigriceps Great Indian Bustard
Astrochelys yniphora Ploughshare tortoise / angonoka
Atelopus balios Rio pescado stubfoot toad
Aythya innotata Madagascar Pochard
Azurina eupalama Galapagos damsel fish
Bahaba taipingensis Giant yellow croaker
Batagur baska Common Batagur/ Four-toed terrapin
Bazzania bhutanica
Beatragus hunteri Hirola
Bombus franklini Franklin’s Bumble Bee
Brachyteles hypoxanthus Northern muriqui
Bradypus pygmaeus Pygmy sloth
Callitriche pulchra
Calumma tarzan Tarzan’s chameleon
Cavia intermedia Santa Catarina’s guinea pig
Cercopithecus roloway Roloway Guenon
Coleura seychellensis Seychelles sheath-tailed bat
Cryptomyces maximus
Cryptotis nelsoni Nelson’s small-eared shrew
Cyclura collei Jamaican iguana
Dendrophylax fawcettii Cayman Islands ghost orchid
Dicerorhinus sumatrensis Sumatran rhino
Diomedea amsterdamensis Amsterdam Island albatross
Diospyros katendei
Dipterocarpus lamellatus
Discoglossus nigriventer Hula painted frog
Discorea strydomiana Wild Yam
Dombeya mauritiana
Elaeocarpus bojeri
Eleutherodactylus glandulifer La Hotte Glanded Frog
Eleutherodactylus thorectes Macaya Breast-spot frog
Eriosyce chilensis Chilenito
Erythrina schliebenii coral tree
Euphorbia tanaensis
Eurynorhynchus pygmeus Spoon-billed sandpiper
Ficus katendei
Geronticus eremita Northern Bald Ibis
Gigasiphon macrosiphon
Gocea ohridana
Heleophryne rosei Table Mountain ghost frog
Hemicycla paeteliana
Heteromirafra sidamoensis Liben Lark
Hibiscadelphus woodii
Hucho perryi (Parahucho perryi) Sakhalin taimen
Johora singaporensis Singapore Freshwater Crab
Lathyrus belinensis
Leiopelma archeyi Archey’s frog
Lithobates sevosus Dusky gopher frog
Lophura edwardsi Edward’s pheasant
Magnolia wolfii
Margaritifera marocana
Moominia willii
Natalus primus Cuban greater funnel eared bat
Nepenthes attenboroughii Attenborough’s Pitcher Plant
Neurergus kaiseri Luristan newt
Nomascus hainanus Hainan Gibbon
Oreocnemis phoenix Mulanje Red Damsel
Pangasius sanitwongsei Pangasid catfish
Parides burchellanus
Phocoena sinus Vaquita
Picea neoveitchii
Pinus squamata Qiaojia Pine
Poecilotheria metallica Peacock Parachute Spider
Pomarea whitneyi Fatuhiva monarch
Pristis pristis Common Sawfish
Prolemur simus Greater bamboo lemur
Propithecus candidus Silky Sifaka
Psammobates geometricus Geometric tortoise
Pseudoryx nghetinhensis Saola
Psiadia cataractae
Psorodonotus ebneri Beydaglari Bush-cricket
Rafetus swinhoei Red River giant softshell turtle
Rhinoceros sondaicus Javan rhino
Rhinopithecus avunculus Tonkin snub-nosed monkey
Rhizanthella gardneri West Australian underground Orchid
Rhynchocyon spp. Boni Giant Sengi
Risiocnemis seidenschwarzi Cebu frill-wing
Rosa arabica
Salanoia durrelli Durrell’s Vontsira
Santamartamys rufodorsalis Red-crested tree rat
Scaturiginichthys vermeilipinnis Red-finned blue eye
Squatina squatina Angel shark
Sterna bernsteini Chinese crested tern
Syngnathus watermeyeri Estuarine Pipefish (River Pipefish)
Tahina spectabilis Suicide Palm
Telmatobufo bullocki Bullock’s false toad
Tokudaia muenninki Okinawa Spiny Rat
Trigonostigma somphongsi Somphongs’s rasbora
Valencia letourneuxi
Voanioala gerardii Forest Coconut
Zaglossus attenboroughi Attenborough’s Echidna

Photo Credit:

The Sumatran rhino (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis) is threatened by hunting for its horn, which is used in traditional medicine. There are fewer than 250 individuals left in the wild.
CREDIT: Copyright Save the Rhino International

Cayman Islands Ghost Orchid (Dendrophylax fawcettii)

For more on this story go to:

http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/3459-100-most-threatened-species.html

Footnote: The report says the numbers of the Ghost Orchid are declining and the number in existence today are unknown. The reason for the decline is “Habitat destruction due to infrastructure development”. The action required to remedy the problem is “Development of legislation that will facilitate the protection of the Ironwood Forests”.

 

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In a UK Daily Mail article it calls the report “One last swansong”

An international consortium of more than 8,000 scientists have called for urgent help to save Earth’s 100 most threatened animals, plants and fungi.

While Nature has always operated by survival of the fittest, humanity’s increasing need for space is adding to the stresses on the natural kingdom.

The report blamed a loss of habitat, caused by a rising human population and other factors such as expanding cities, deforestation, pollution and climate change, for driving more and more species of animals and plants to extinction.

The 100 species, from 48 different countries are first in line to disappear completely if nothing is done to protect them.

The 124-page report will be presented at the IUCN World Conservation Congress in South Korea this week, and hopes to push the conservation of ‘worthless’ creatures up the agenda that is set by NGOs from around the globe.

Professor Jonathan Baillie, director of conservation at ZSL, said: ‘Over half (of the 100 most endangered species) are receiving little or no attention.

‘The donor community and conservation movement are leaning increasingly towards a ‘what can nature do for us’ approach, where species and wild habitats are valued and prioritised according to the services they provide for people.

‘This has made it increasingly difficult for conservationists to protect the most threatened species on the planet.

‘While the utilitarian value of nature is important conservation goes beyond this. Do these species have a right to survive or do we have a right to drive them to extinction?’

Co-author of the report, ZSL’s Ellen Butcher says: ‘All the species listed are unique and irreplaceable.

‘If they vanish, no amount of money can bring them back. However, if we take immediate action we can give them a fighting chance for survival.

‘But this requires society to support the moral and ethical position that all species have an inherent right to exist.’

The IUCN said the report ‘hopes to push the conservation of ‘worthless’ creatures up the agenda that is set by NGOs (non-governmental organisations) from around the globe.’

‘We need a fund to prevent extinction, resourced by governments, that is in the billions, not millions,’ the report said, without specifying a currency.

Measures such as an expansion of protected areas or hunting bans were particularly needed, it said.

Baillie said people may have gone too far in recent years in judging animals and plants by the economic value of the services they provide, including food, medicine or as tourist attractions.

‘We need to keep the appreciation for the wonderful diversity of life on Earth as the key message, and then other utilitarian arguments have to be additional,’ he said.

Governments agreed in 2010 to a plan to protect life on earth that included the goal: ‘By 2020 the extinction of known threatened species has been prevented and their conservation status, particularly of those most in decline, has been improved and sustained.’

The IUCN said that all species had value.

‘Although the value of some species may not appear obvious at first, all species in fact contribute in their way to the healthy functioning of the planet,’ said Simon Stuart, Chair of the IUCN Species Survival Commission.

The list of the 100 most endangered species included others such as the Cayman Islands ghost orchid, and the Javan rhino.

A ban on hunting had helped the recovery of the humpback whale, now estimated to number 60,000.

Captive breeding meant that Przewalski’s horse, once almost extinct, now numbered more than 300 in the wild from Ukraine to China.

The pygmy three-toed sloth (Bradypus pygmaeus) is one of the animals facing a bleak future. Escudo Island, 17km off the coast of Panama, is the only place in the world where these tiny sloths are found.

At half the size of their mainland cousins, and weighing roughly the same as a newborn baby, pygmy sloths are the smallest and slowest sloths in the world and remain Critically Endangered.

Similarly, the saola (Pseudoryx nghetinhensis) is one of the most threatened mammals in Southeast Asia. Known as the Asian unicorn because of its rarity, the population of these antelope may be down to few tens of individuals today.

In the UK, a small area in Wales is the only place in the world where the brightly coloured willow blister (Cryptomyces maximus) is found. Populations of the spore-shooting fungi are currently in decline, and a single catastrophic event could cause their total destruction.

Professor Baillie said: ‘If we believe these species are priceless it is time for the conservation community, government and industry to step up to the plate and show future generations that we value all life.”

Whilst monetising nature remains a worthwhile necessity for conservationists, the wider value of species on the brink of extinction should not be disregarded, the report states.

For more on this story go to: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2201459/8-000-scientists-plea-save-100-endangered-animals-plants.html#ixzz26Nkt5IUO

 

You can download the whole report at: ( www.scribd.com/doc/105589268/Priceless-or-Worthless-Report)

 

 

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