27 Oct 2016

Wildlife populations down by 58% - report

6:39 pm on 27 October 2016

Global wildlife populations have fallen by 58 percent since 1970, a new report says.

a shark on the tiny Pacific island nation of Palau.

The report highlighted sharks as a species under threat from overfishing. Photo: AFP

The latest Living Planet Report, by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and WWF, suggested that if the trend continued, the decline could reach two thirds among vertebrates by 2020.

The figures suggested that animals living in lakes, rivers and wetlands were suffering the biggest losses.

The declines were attributed to human activity, including habitat loss, wildlife trade, pollution and climate change.

WWF head of science and police Mike Barrett said: "It's pretty clear under 'business as usual' we will see continued declines in these wildlife populations. But I think now we've reached a point where there isn't really any excuse to let this carry on.

"We know what the causes are and we know the scale of the impact that humans are having on nature and on wildlife populations - it really is now down to us to act."

However the methodology of the report has been criticised.

The snake found at the North Shore used car yard was a Japanese rat snake like this one.

Reptiles were among the species looked at. Photo: 123rf

The Living Planet Report is published every two years and aims to provide an assessment of the state of the world's wildlife.

This analysis looked at data collected on 3700 different species of birds, fish, mammals, amphibians and reptiles - about 6 percent of the total number of vertebrate species in the world.

The researchers then analysed how the population sizes had changed over time since 1970.

The last report, published in 2014, estimated that the world's wildlife populations had halved over the last 40 years.

This assessment suggested that the trend had continued: since 1970, populations had declined by an average of 58 percent.

Dr Barrett said some groups of animals had fared worse than others.

"We do see particularly strong declines in the freshwater environment - for freshwater species alone, the decline stands at 81 percent since 1970. This is related to the way water is used and taken out of fresh water systems, and also the fragmentation of freshwater systems through dam building, for example."

A rare insight into the elusive forest elephants of Africa has just been publsihed, and it says the species could take almost a century to recover from poaching.

An increase in poaching has seen a huge decline in the African elephant population, the report found. Photo: Andrea Turkalo/Elephant Listening Project

It also highlighted other species, such as African elephants, which had suffered huge declines in recent years with the increase in poaching, and sharks, which were threatened by overfishing.

The researchers concluded that vertebrate populations were declining by an average of 2 percent each year, and warned that if nothing is done, wildlife populations could fall by 67 percent (below 1970 levels) by the end of the decade.

Dr Robin Freeman, head of ZSL's Indicators & Assessments Unit, said: "But that's assuming things continue as we expect. If pressures - overexploitation, illegal wildlife trade, for example - increase or worsen, then that trend may be worse.

"But one of the things I think is most important about these stats, these trends are declines in the number of animals in wildlife populations - they are not extinctions. By and large they are not vanishing, and that presents us with an opportunity to do something about it."

'Some numbers ... are very, very sketchy'

However, the assessments have drawn some criticisms.

Stuart Pimm, professor of conservation ecology at Duke University in the United States, said that while wildlife was in decline, there were too many gaps in the data to boil population loss down to a single figure.

"There are some numbers [in the report] that are sensible, but there are some numbers that are very, very sketchy," he said.

"For example, if you look at where the data comes from, not surprisingly, it is massively skewed towards western Europe.

"When you go elsewhere, not only do the data become far fewer, but in practice they become much, much sketchier... there is almost nothing from South America, from tropical Africa, there is not much from the tropics, period. Any time you are trying to mix stuff like that, it is is very very hard to know what the numbers mean.

"They're trying to pull this stuff in a blender and spew out a single number ... It's flawed."

Male gorilla at Kahuzi Biega National Park, Democratic Republic of Congo.

Male gorilla at Kahuzi Biega National Park, Democratic Republic of Congo Photo: AFP / Sofia Bouderbala

But Dr Freeman said the team had taken the best data possible from around the world.

"It's completely true that in some regions and in some groups, like tropical amphibians for example, we do have a lack of data. But that's because there is a lack of data.

"We're confident that the method we are using is the best method to present an overall estimate of population decline.

"It's entirely possible that species that aren't being monitored as effectively may be doing much worse - but I'd be very surprised if they were doing much better than we observed. "

- BBC

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