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Abalone and Dugongs threatened with extinction, warns IUCN Red List

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The effects of human activity from climate change to pollution are “devastating” marine life, with nearly a tenth of underwater plants and animals assessed so far threatened with extinction, the latest Red List of Threatened Species showed on Friday.

The report’s release coincides with a UN summit on nature in Montreal where UN Chief Antonio Guterres has urged countries to end an “orgy of destruction” and pass a deal to halt and reverse habitat loss.

More than 1,550 of some 17,903 marine plants and animals assessed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature are at risk of extinction, according to the latest list which acts as a barometer of biodiversity and is published several times a year.

“It shows that we are having quite a devastating impact on marine species,” Craig Hilton-Taylor, head of the IUCN Red List, said.

“Underwater, you can’t really see what’s going on. And so by assessing the status of the species it gives us a real indicator of what is really happening there, and it’s not good news.”

Hilton-Taylor said the portion of marine species facing extinction was likely much higher than current data shows because those analyzed so far have tended to be widespread fish species, not currently under threat.

Populations of the dugong, a plump, grey herbivorous mammal commonly known as the sea cow, have fallen to fewer than 250 adults in east Africa and fewer than 900 in the French territory of New Caledonia, the IUCN said.

Among the threats they face are the loss of their main food source, seagrass, due to oil and gas exploration and production in the case of Mozambique and pollution from nickel mining in the Pacific.

The latest list reviews abalone species, a type of mollusc sold as a luxury seafood item, for the first time and found that around 44% of them face extinction. Increasingly severe and frequent marine heat waves have caused mass die-offs, by stoking disease and killing their food sources, IUCN says.

In South Africa, poaching has “devastated” certain abalone populations, while pollution from agricultural and industrial run-off have “eliminated” other abalone in part of the Arabian Peninsula,” according to the IUCN in a news release.

The pillar coral, a Caribbean species resembling upright stalactites, slid down two categories from “vulnerable” to “critically endangered.”

Its population has shrunk by over 80% across much of its range since 1990 amid bleaching and disease.

And the pillar coral is just one of many in danger; in the Atlantic Ocean, almost half of all corals are at risk of extinction due to climate change and other factors.

“The awful status of these species should shock us and engage us for urgent action,” said Amanda Vincent, chair of the IUCN Species Survival Commission Marine Conservation Committee.

The world’s wildlife populations plummeted by an average of 69% between 1970 and 2018, a dangerous decline resulting from climate change and other human activity, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) warned in a report in October.

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