• Slide number 0
    African lion (Pan­thera leo)
  • Slide number 1
    Chee­tah (Aci­nonyx juba­tus)
  • Slide number 2
    Clouded leop­ard (Neo­fe­lis neb­u­losa) | more info
  • Slide number 3
    Euro­pean wild­cat (Felis sil­vestris)
  • Slide number 4
    Jaguar (Pan­thera onca)
  • Slide number 5
    Jaguarundi (Her­pail­u­rus yagouaroundi)
  • Slide number 6
    Puma, Moun­tain lion, Cougar (Puma con­color)
  • Slide number 7
    Ocelot (Leop­ar­dus pardalis)
  • Slide number 8
    Pal­las’ cat, Manul (Oto­colobus manul)
  • Slide number 9
    Sand cat (Felis mar­garita)
  • Slide number 10
    Ser­val (Lep­tail­u­rus ser­val)
  • Slide number 11
    Snow leop­ard (Pan­thera uncia) | more info
  • Slide number 12
    South Chines tiger (Pan­thera tigris ssp. amoyen­sis)

201217Oct08:51

Pri­mates in Peril: Top 25 most Endan­gered Pri­mates, new report released

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 17 Octo­ber 2012 | mod­i­fied 17 Octo­ber 2012
Archived

Diana rolowayThe world’s 25 most endan­gered pri­mates have been revealed in a new report released Octo­ber 15 at the UN’s Con­ven­tion on Bio­log­i­cal Diver­sity COP11. Pri­mates in Peril: The World’s 25 Most Endan­gered Pri­mates, 20122014 has been com­piled by the Pri­mate Spe­cial­ist Group of IUCN’s Species Sur­vival Com­mis­sion (SSC) and the Inter­na­tional Pri­ma­to­log­i­cal Soci­ety (IPS), in col­lab­o­ra­tion with Con­ser­va­tion Inter­na­tional (CI) and the Bris­tol Con­ser­va­tion and Sci­ence Foun­da­tion (BCSF).

Pri­mates are among the most per­se­cuted of trop­i­cal species — relent­lessly hunted for their meat and fur, bod­ies bro­ken for dubi­ous med­i­cines, shot for steal­ing crops in fields which were once their home. All the forests of the world can­not sate the sum of human hunger: they are cut and burned, day and night, and the rem­nants of their grandeur will not long sur­vive with­out our intervention.

Thus no pri­mate is entirely free from dan­ger; but the few high­lighted in this report are those whose very exis­tence is in doubt. Each one named here is almost lost — each an entire race of beings, now reduced to a tat­tered rem­nant: two or three dozen in the worst of cases, a mere few hun­dred for the rest. From the Atlantic For­est of Brazil to the mon­soon slopes of Mada­gas­car, from the moun­tains of south­west China to the islands of Mentawai, these pri­mates are caught between fad­ing hope and hard obliv­ion. And if through our fail­ure of action they should cease to exist, we will have lost our near­est com­pan­ions — and a part of our­selves — from what wilder­ness remains in the world. The gal­leries of the Top 25 pri­mates which link to indi­vid­ual pro­files, you can find here.

The above news item is reprinted from mate­ri­als avail­able at IUCN-​SCC Pri­mate SG and IUCN. Orig­i­nal text may be edited for con­tent and length.

(Source: IUCN-​SSC Pri­mate Spe­cial­ist Group, 16.10.2012; IUCN press release, 15.10.2012)

UN Biodiversity decade
WWF Stop Wildlife Crime
Amur leopard conservation
End Ivory-funded Terrorism
Support Rewilding Europe
Snow Leopard Trust

Goal: 7000 tigers in the wild

Tiger range countries map

Tiger map” (CC BY 2.5) by Sander­son et al., 2006.

about zoos and their mis­sion regard­ing breed­ing endan­gered species, nature con­ser­va­tion, bio­di­ver­sity and edu­ca­tion, which of course relates to the evo­lu­tion of species.
Fol­low me on: