Species We Lost

I am hoping the author will grant us an allowance to follow-up on some of the commentaries as this is an important topic. Most Americans are not aware of the impact they have on the areas around them. I see this as one way of making them aware of their impact. A review of species becoming extinct or endangered.

We may never see another individual of these species ever again. Or will we?

Slender-billed curlew

This grayish-brown migratory waterbird, known to breed in Siberia and the Kazakh Steppe, and migrate to Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, long evaded detection.

“We arguably spent too much time watching the bird’s decline and not enough actually trying to fix things,” Geoff Hilton, conservation scientist at U.K.-based charity Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust, previously told Mongabay. 

Christmas Island shrew

The Christmas Island shrew (Crocidura trichura) was once widespread on Australia’s Christmas Island.

Researchers say a blood-borne parasite transmitted by accidentally introduced black rats, which wiped out two of the island’s endemic rat species, may have also helped decimate populations of the Christmas Island shrew.

Australian mammals

Three Australian species of bandicoots — the marl (Perameles myosuros), southeastern striped bandicoot (Perameles notina) and Nullarbor barred bandicoot (Perameles papillon) — were also declared extinct on the IUCN Red List this year. All three species were last assessed in 2022.

Bandicoots are small, mostly nocturnal, insect-eating mammals found in Australia, New Guinea and nearby islands.

All three now-extinct species were likely wiped out by the loss of habitat and the spread of feral cats, researchers say.

Plants

Mollusks