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Taita thrush [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Taita thrush The Taita thrush ("Turdus helleri"), also known as Taita olive thrush or Heller's ground thrush, is a critically endangered bird from the family of thrushes (Turdidae), endemic to the Taita Hills in Kenya. Description. The Taita thrush was previously classified as subspecies of the olive thrush ("Turdus olivaceus"), but it is regarded as distinct species since 1985. It reaches a length between 20 and 22 centimetres. Head, breast and upperparts are coloured darkly. The
birds – with the thrush as the flagship species – to champion the conservation of the Taita Hills forests. Ecology. It is restricted to montane moist forests. Despite its natural native habitat having been severely logged in the past, it has avoided forests with secondary growth, shrub vegetation, and cultivated areas. Extensive research has shown only very few migrations between the fragmented populations. External links. - Birdlife factsheet - Turdus helleri - Taita-Hills Biodiversity Project Report (pdf) - Taita thrush illustrated
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Talaud bush-hen [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Talaud bush-hen The Talaud bush-hen ("Amaurornis magnirostris") is a vulnerable waterbird in the rail and crake family. It is a recently described species from Karakelang Island in the Talaud Islands, Indonesia. It occurs in forest, scrub, and overgrown plantations. Description. Talaud bush-hen is a 30.5 cm long, large, very dark and robust bush-hen. Its large head and its upperparts are dark brown, and its underparts and flanks are very dark bluish grey
Inaccessible Island rail - Little wood rail - Rufous-necked wood rail - Grey-necked wood rail - White-bellied wood rail - Brown wood rail - Giant wood rail - Slaty-breasted wood rail - Red-winged wood rail - Uniform crake - Blue-faced rail - Talaud rail - Bare-eyed rail - Brown crake - Isabelline bush-hen - Plain bush-hen - Pale-vented bush-hen - Talaud
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Tana River mangabey [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Tana River mangabey The Tana River mangabey ("Cercocebus galeritus") is a highly endangered species of primate in the family Cercopithecidae. Some authorities have included the taxa "agilis" and "sanjei" as subspecies of this species, while others award these full species status. It is endemic to riverine forest patches along the lower Tana River in southeastern Kenya. It is threatened by habitat loss and degradation, which has increased in recent years. This species was, together with the equally endangered Tana River red colobus,
"P. tephrosceles", "P. foai" and "P. tholloni" as subspecies of "P. rufomitratus" instead of recognizing them as separate species. Conservation status. The Tana River red colobus had been considered one of The World's 25 Most Endangered Primates. It was, together with the equally endangered Tana River mangabey, the main reason for the creation of the Tana River Primate Reserve in 1978, but human encroachment within this reserve continues. Recently, it has been suggested that 20,000 hectares of the Tana River
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Tana River red colobus [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Tana River red colobus The Tana River red colobus ("Piliocolobus rufomitratus"), also called the eastern red colobus, is a highly endangered species of primate in the family Cercopithecidae. It is endemic to a narrow zone of gallery forest near the Tana River in southeastern Kenya. Taxonomy. As here defined, "P. rufomitratus" is a monotypic species restricted to Kenya, following Groves. As all red colobuses, it was formerly considered a subspecies of a widespread "P. badius". Some recent authorities include
the watch of the Tana River Primate National Reserve (TRPNR). They put a large amount of research and study into the conservation of the Tana River red colobus. They found that only 37% of the red colobuses lived inside the preservation itself, which has brought the conservation strategy into question. Conservation status Causes of endangerment. The Tana River red colobus is located only in a very small section of the world. Its current endangerment is caused by habitat loss and persecution by humans. Tropical forests are constantly being cut
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Taxus floridana [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Taxus floridana Taxus floridana, the Florida yew, is a species of yew, endemic to a small area of under 10 km² on the eastern side of the Apalachicola River in mesophytic forests of northern Florida at altitudes of 15–40 m. It is listed as critically endangered. It is protected in reserves at the Torreya State Park and at the Nature Conservancy's Apalachicola Bluffs and Ravines Preserve, and has legal protection under the United States and Florida Endangered Species laws. Description. It is an evergreen coniferous shrub or small
- "Taxus rehderiana" Rehder yew - "Taxus scutata" Scutaceous yew - Subgroup: "Wallichiana" Subgroup - "Taxus brevifolia" Pacific yew, western yew - "Taxus floridana" Florida yew - "Taxus florinii" Florin yew - "Taxus globosa" Mesoamerican yew - "Taxus suffnessii" Suffness yew - "Taxus wallichiana" Wallich yew, East Himalayan yew Fossil (extinct) species - "Taxus engelhardtii" – Oligocene, Bohemia, twig-leaves, similar
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Tehuantepec jackrabbit [SEP] IUCN conservation status
to four embryos, but the number of litters produced per female per year remains to be investigated. Conservation. The Tehuantepec jackrabbit is listed as critically endangered in the Mexican Official Norm NOM-059-ECOL-2001, and as an endangered species by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Endangered Species. Threats. The Tehuantepec jackrabbit is jeopardized by habitat loss and fragmentation, poaching, small population size, and genetic isolation. Introduction of exotic grasses, frequent and induced fires, agricultural and cattle-
") and the American kestrel ("Falco sparverius"). Status. Since the black jackrabbit is only found on the island of Espiritu Santo, its total range covers only , the area of the island. However, it is common over much of the island and the population appears to be stable. The chief threats it faces are from the introduction of non-native species and the disturbance of its habitat by humans, and the IUCN has rated its conservation status as being "near threatened". The
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Telescopus hoogstraali [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Telescopus hoogstraali Telescopus hoogstraali, common names of which include Hoogstraal’s cat snake and the Sinai cat snake, is an endangered species of snake in the family Colubridae. The species is endemic to the Middle East. Etymology. The specific name, "hoogstraali", is in honor of American entomologist and parasitologist Harry Hoogstraal. Description. "T. hoogstraali" has a black-coloured neck and head. Its eyes are small with vertical, cat-like pupils. The snake's underbelly is grey and
subtropical or tropical dry lowland grassland, rocky areas, and hot deserts. Conservation status. "T. hoogstraali" is threatened by habitat loss and distribution. Further reading. - Schmidt KP, (1956). "The Herpetology of Sinai". "Fieldiana Zoology" 39 (4): 21-40. ("Telescopus hoogstraali", new species, pp. 33-35, Figures 5 & 6).
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Telmatobius brachydactylus [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Telmatobius brachydactylus Telmatobius brachydactylus, the Amable Maria frog, is an endangered species of frog in the Telmatobiidae family. This semi-aquatic frog is endemic to tributaries of Lake Junín (not in the lake itself) in central Peru, where it is found at altitudes of . It is threatened by capture for human consumption. Although a fairly large species with a typical snout-vent length of and weight of , it is significantly smaller than the closely related and equally threatened Lake Junin frog ("T. macrostomus")
for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) assessed "Telmatobius dankoi" as being critically endangered. Its range is very small, and the habitat is affected by water pollution from mining activities. Additional threats are abstraction of surface water for human consumption and agriculture, as well as recreational activities.
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Telmatobius culeus [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Telmatobius culeus Telmatobius culeus, commonly known as the Titicaca water frog, is a very large and critically endangered species of frog in the family Telmatobiidae. It is entirely aquatic and only found in Lake Titicaca and rivers that flow into this lake in the Andean highlands of South America. In reference to its excessive amounts of skin, it has jokingly been referred to as the Titicaca scrotum water frog. It is closely related to the smaller, more widespread and semi-aquatic marbled water frog ("T. marmoratus")
and wetlands in the Andean highlands at altitudes between . The genus includes two of the world's largest fully aquatic frogs, the Lake Junin frog ("T. macrostomus") and Titicaca water frog ("T. culeus"), but the remaining are considerably smaller. "Telmatobius" contains more than 60 species; the vast majority seriously threatened, especially from habitat loss, pollution, diseases (chytridiomycosis and nematode infections), introduced trout, and capture for human consumption. The three Ecuadorian species have not been seen for years
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Tennessee dace [SEP] IUCN conservation status
is the case of the Tennessee dace and the common creek chub. This hybridization likely occurs due to their similar breeding behaviors, such as communal use of gravel nests. Degradation of streams is thought to increase the chance of hybridization, as this leaves a lack of clean gravel substrates needed for spawning. Conservation. The Tennessee dace is listed as G3 (globally vulnerable to extirpation) and S3 (state vulnerable to extirpation and extinction). It is listed as "in need of management" in Tennessee and "endangered
nutrition. More generally, their diet is described as one of "vegetation and invertebrates." Conservation status. This organism is found in healthy numbers throughout the US, however, isolated populations in Colorado, New Mexico, South Dakota, Michigan, and Pennsylvania have become critically imperiled due to isolation. It is not listed on the IUCN red list. Environmental significance. The southern redbelly dace is an important environmental indicator of river and stream health. This is because the minnow prefers clear unpolluted waters. They
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Tenuibranchiurus [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Its habitat is highly fragmented, as land is used for the expansion of Brisbane and the Sunshine Coast, and "Tenuibranchiurus glypticus" is therefore listed as an endangered species on the IUCN Red List. Additional populations have been found at the periphery of its range, but these are thought to represent new, undescribed species. See also. - Tasmanian giant freshwater crayfish - world's largest freshwater crayfish, also found in Australia
the Small Entrepreneur Programme – SEP– and uplifted the lives of countless plantation workers. These are only a few of over 100 projects the MJF Foundation implements each year. Sustainability. In 2007, Fernando extended his commitment to human service by establishing Dilmah Conservation www.dilmahconservation.org which focuses on working towards a more sustainable use of the environment in partnership with IUCN, the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The Dilmah Conservation initiative aims to foster respect for the environment and ensure its protection by encouraging a harmonious co-existence of man
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Thorius pulmonaris [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Thorius pulmonaris Thorius pulmonaris (common names: lower cerro pigmy salamander, Cerro San Felipe salamander) is a species of salamander in the family Plethodontidae. It is endemic to Oaxaca, Mexico. The species' natural habitats are deciduous forests, including those with some pines. It is a terrestrial species usually found beneath leaves and bark. It tolerates some habitat degradation. "T. pulmonaris" is an endangered species due to its extent of occurrence being less than 5,000 km. The species is only definitely known to
- "Thorius narismagnus" (CR) - "Thorius narisovalis" (CR) - "Thorius omiltemi" (EN) - "Thorius papaloae" (EN) - "Thorius pennatulus" (CR) - "Thorius pulmonaris" (EN) - "Thorius schmidti" (EN) - "Thorius smithi" (CR) - "Thorius spilogaster" (CR) - "Thorius troglodytes" (EN) Salamanders (Caudata) Salamandridae. Order: Caudata.
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Thyolo alethe [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Thyolo alethe The Thyolo alethe or Cholo alethe ("Chamaetylas choloensis") is an endangered species of bird in the family Muscicapidae. It is found in Malawi and Mozambique. It is named after Thyolo, a nearby town in Malawi. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist montane forests. It is most threatened by habitat loss due to deforestation, fires, and human activities. Description. This bird has rust-coloured upper parts and white underparts with grey plumage on the sides of its face and neck
identified, there are seven new populations of globally threatened species of birds in the forest, including the Thyolo alethe, whose other populations are all threatened by logging and deforestation. Others include Swynnerton's robin and Namuli apalis. In June 2009, the Mozambique government announced that they would establish conservation measures to prevent commercial logging. The Mabu forest is believed to be the largest medium-altitude rain forest in Africa. African forests that are unspoiled by logging and other human activity are rare. The Mount Mabu forest is surrounded by
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Tibetan sand fox [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Tibetan sand fox The Tibetan sand fox ("Vulpes ferrilata") is a species of true fox endemic to the high Tibetan Plateau, Ladakh plateau, Nepal, China, Sikkim, and Bhutan, up to altitudes of about 5300 m. It is classed as of "least concern" for extinction by the IUCN, on account of its widespread range in the Tibetan Plateau's steppes and semi-deserts. It is sometimes referred to as the Tibetan fox, or simply as the sand fox, but this terminology is
been naturalised by cultivation across a much wider area. It occurs at altitudes between and . It grows along the banks of rivers and wetlands in alpine areas, preferring sand, pebbly or bolder-rich alluvial substrates. Outside these areas it does descend into lowland areas, occurring along main rivers such as the Visla and the Rhine (often with Salix eleagnos and Myricaria germanica) as well as in loose sand dunes. Conservation status. The species is regarded by the IUCN as having a conservation status of 'Least
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Timor sparrow [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Timor. Its diet consists mainly of rice and seeds. Due to ongoing habitat loss, limited range and illegal trapping for cage-bird trade, the Timor sparrow is evaluated as near threatened on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Some taxonomists place this species and the Java sparrow in their own genus, "Padda". References. - Database entry includes a brief justification of why this species is near threatened. External links. - BirdLife International.org: "Lonchura fuscata" species factsheet -
. Relationships with humans Status. The house sparrow has an extremely large range and population, and is not seriously threatened by human activities, so it is assessed as least concern for conservation on the IUCN Red List. The IUCN estimates for the global population runs up to nearly 1.4 billion individuals, second among all birds perhaps only to the red-billed quelea in abundance (although the quelea is, unlike the sparrow, restricted to a single continent and has never been subject to human introductions). However, populations have
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Turkish hamster [SEP] IUCN conservation status
The Turkish hamster is a rare species, but is the most widespread of the family Cricetidae. Its ability to live in a variety of environments means the Turkish hamster often lives on farmlands, and is viewed as and controlled as an agricultural pest. In 1996, the Turkish hamster was categorized as an animal with the lowest risk of extinction, but due to cases of direct poisoning by farmers, it is now near threatened. More data are needed to understand the population decline. Reproduction. Turkish hamsters are weaned from
the common kestrel, and the saker falcon. All distribution areas have more females than males, because males are at higher risk from predators, as they cannot move as quickly. Status and conservation. This hamster is listed as of Least Concern by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). The population and distribution size are large, and no major or widespread threats to the species are known. However, the increasing number of livestock in the areas of distribution, such as the steppes of
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Typhlichthys subterraneus [SEP] IUCN conservation status
fewer than 50 eggs per female. This provides restrictions on its capabilities for recovering from an even minor population decline. When young are produced, they brood in the female's gill chamber. Sexual maturity requires approximately two years, and the life span is approximately four years. "Typhlichthys subterraneus" is listed as near threatened on the IUCN Red List. Due to environmental threats, there has been a recent decline in geographical span and population density. This is perhaps due to pollution, lowering of the water table, flooding
Typhlichthys subterraneus Typhlichthys subterraneus, the southern cavefish, is a species of cavefish in the Amblyopsidae family endemic to karst regions of the eastern United States. Taxonomy. "T. subterraneus" is a member of Amblyopsidae and is one of five obligate troglobitic species in this family. "T. subterraneus" is currently the only member of the genus "Typhlichthys", but it may be a cryptic species complex. The southern cavefish was described by Charles Frédéric Girard in 1859 from a well near Bowling Green, Warren County
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Uta Hick's bearded saki [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Uta Hick's bearded saki Uta Hick's bearded saki ("Chiropotes utahicki") is an endangered species of bearded saki, a type of New World monkey. It is endemic to Brazil, where restricted to the Amazon between the Xingu and Tocantins Rivers. It was formerly treated as a subspecies of the more easterly "C. satanas", but its back is pale brownish. The specific name is often modified to "utahickae", but this has been discouraged.
Cacajao hosomi" (Neblina uakari) - ICMBio status - "Callicebus barbarabrownae" (Barbara Brown's titi) - ICMBio status - "Callicebus coimbrai" (Coimbra Filho's titi) - ICMBio status - "Callicebus melanochir" (Coastal black-handed titi) - ICMBio status - "Callicebus personatus" (Atlantic titi) - ICMBio status - "Chiropotes satanas" (Black bearded saki) - ICMBio status - "Chiropotes utahicki" (Uta Hick's bearded saki) - ICMBio status
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Visayan spotted deer [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Visayan spotted deer The Visayan spotted deer ("Rusa alfredi"), also known as the Philippine spotted deer or Prince Alfred's deer, is a nocturnal and endangered species of deer located primarily in the rainforests of the Visayan islands of Panay and Negros though it once roamed other islands such as Cebu, Guimaras, Leyte, Masbate, and Samar. It is one of three endemic deer species in the Philippines, although it was not recognized as a separate species until 1983. An estimated 2,500 mature individuals survived worldwide as
. The spotted harriers generation length is estimated to be 10 years. Conservation Status. The spotted harrier is of least concern according to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (last updated 2012). Their population trend is stable with the species being listed under Least Concerned status for at least the last 9 years. The species is not considered Vulnerable as it maintains an extremely large range at more than 20,000km2, their population trend appears to be stable at less than 30% decline over ten years and population size is
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Visayan warty pig [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Visayan warty pig The Visayan warty pig ("Sus cebifrons") is a critically endangered species in the pig genus ("Sus"). It is known by many names in the region (depending on the island and linguistic group) with most translating into 'wild pig': "baboy damo" (literally, 'bush pig' in Tagalog), "baboy ihalas" ('wild pig' in Cebuano and Hiligaynon), "baboy talonon" ('forest pig' in Hiligaynon), "
the land that is cleared for farming is often unproductive after a few years, the food sources of the Visayan warty pig are extremely limited, a factor that has contributed significantly to the pig's dwindling numbers. Reproduction. Visayan warty pig piglets are often seen during the dry season between the months of January and March in their native habitat of the western Visayan Islands. The mean number of piglets is three to four per litter. Captive status. In addition to a few other conservation programs in the Philippines
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Voanioala [SEP] IUCN conservation status
valleys, as well as slopes in rainforests at an elevation of 200–450 meters above sea level. Conservation. "Voanioala gerardii" is critically endangered because of its scarcity. Only 10-15 trees are found. They are cut down for their edible palm hearts, and their seeds are used for market trade. They are also rare because of its poor dispersal of seeds. Habitat loss through agricultural logging threatens forest coconuts as well. The national park in Masoala Peninsula protects the forest coconuts on its property, and its
the Small Entrepreneur Programme – SEP– and uplifted the lives of countless plantation workers. These are only a few of over 100 projects the MJF Foundation implements each year. Sustainability. In 2007, Fernando extended his commitment to human service by establishing Dilmah Conservation www.dilmahconservation.org which focuses on working towards a more sustainable use of the environment in partnership with IUCN, the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The Dilmah Conservation initiative aims to foster respect for the environment and ensure its protection by encouraging a harmonious co-existence of man
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Waccamaw killifish [SEP] IUCN conservation status
or near-surface waters over sandy bottoms in open waters or closer to vegetation around shores, and in winter may venture into surrounding swamps and canals. Conservation. While there are no known specific threats to the Waccamaw killifish, it is currently classified as vulnerable by the IUCN because of its restriction to a single location.
"'s preferred habitat, the species was once thought to be rare; however, more recent studies have shown that it can be locally abundant. Spotfin killifish are distributed along the east coast of the United States, ranging from Massachusetts to Georgia. Distribution and habitat Conservation Status. The spotfin killifish is listed as a species of "least concern" (LC) by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Diet. Spotfin killifish have a diet similar to the mummichog, consisting of detritus, diatoms,
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White River spinedace [SEP] IUCN conservation status
White River spinedace The White River spinedace ("Lepidomeda albivallis") is a critically endangered cyprinid fish of Nevada, occurring only in the White River in the southeastern part of the state. This spindace ranges from green to olive above, a brassy silver on the sides, becoming a silvery white underneath. The sides may also have a pattern of faint sooty patches. Dorsal and caudal fins are shades of brown, ranging from olive brown to a pinkish brown; the rays tend to be olive with the membranes between
titi is found in the upper parts of the Mamoré, Grande, and San Miguel river basins, east of the Manique River in Beni and in the forests surrounding the city of Santa Cruz de la Sierra. Its range extends north to southern Rondônia in Brazil. Conservation status. The white-eared titi is considered to be of least concern on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List. The species is not considered threatened due to its adaptability and abundance over a relatively wide range, and
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Wilson's storm petrel [SEP] IUCN conservation status
ability to identify their nest burrows in the dark and their mates by olfactory cues. Widespread throughout its large range, Wilson's storm petrel is evaluated as least concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Other sources. - Beck, J.R. & Brown, D.W. 1972. The Biology of Wilson's Storm Petrel, Oceanites oceanicus (Kuhl) at Signy Island, South Orkney Islands. British Antarctic Survey Scientific Reports No. 69. - Bourne, W.R.P. 1983. Letters (The ‘yellow webs’
the Hydrobatinae and Oceanitinae, were recognized in the past within a single large family Hydrobatidae, but this has since been split with the elevation of the Oceanitidae to family status. The Oceanitinae, or austral storm petrels, were mostly found in southern waters (though Wilson's storm petrel regularly migrates into the Northern Hemisphere); the seven species were in five genera. The Hydrobatinae, or northern storm petrels, were the two genera "Hydrobates" and "Oceanodroma". They were largely restricted to the Northern Hemisphere, although a
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Zakerana murthii [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Zakerana murthii Zakerana murthii (common names: Ghats wart frog, Murthy's frog) is a critically endangered species of frog that is endemic to the Western Ghats in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka states, India. It resembles "Zakerana greenii". It is a little-known species from tropical moist forests.
("Raorchestes ponmudi") - Resplendent shrubfrog ("Raorchestes resplendens") - Shillong bubble-nest frog ("Raorchestes shillongensis") - Anaimalai flying frog ("Rhacophorus pseudomalabaricus") - Sushil's bushfrog ("Raorchestes sushili") - Amboli toad ("Xanthophryne tigerina") - Ghats wart frog ("Zakerana murthii") Mammals - Namdapha flying squirrel ("Biswamoyopterus biswasi") - Himalayan wolf (""Canis himalayensis"") - Elvira
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Zapata rail [SEP] IUCN conservation status
behaviour, and its described calls may belong to a different species. The species was discovered by Spanish zoologist Fermín Zanón Cervera in March 1927 in the Zapata Swamp near Santo Tomás, in the southern Matanzas Province of Cuba. The swamp holds one other bird found nowhere else, the Zapata wren, and also gives its name to the Zapata sparrow. Due to ongoing habitat loss in its limited range, its small population size, and predation by introduced mammals and catfish, the Zapata rail is evaluated as critically endangered on the
but is not usually particularly wary. When disturbed, it may run a short distance and then stop with its tail raised and the conspicuous white undertail showing. Despite its short wings, the Zapata rail may not be completely flightless. On morphological grounds it would be classed as a flightless species, since the pectoral girdle and wing are as reduced as in other species of rails that are considered to be flightless, but Bond reported that he saw one flutter about ten feet across a canal. Conservation status. Island species
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Zayante band-winged grasshopper [SEP] IUCN conservation status
once covered California's Central Valley and when the Santa Cruz Mountains formed, sand from the ocean floor was uplifted and created the sandhills ecosystem. The Zayante sandhills habitat supports plants and animals that are found nowhere else. It is one of the rarest ecosystems of California, and one of the rarest of the United States. The Zayante sandhills ecosystem is not only home to the endangered Zayante band-winged grasshopper, but also to other unique species, many of which are on the endangered species list, including the Mount Hermon
Zayante band-winged grasshopper The Zayante band-winged grasshopper ("Trimerotropis infantilis") is a species of insect in the family Acrididae. It is endemic to a small portion of the Santa Cruz Mountains in California. Background and description. The Zayante band-winged grasshopper is in the Order Orthoptera and Family Acrididae. It is known to be located only in Santa Cruz County, California within the Zayante sandhills, chiefly within a Maritime Coast Range Ponderosa Pine forest. The area has little vegetation and is primarily
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Abarema curvicarpa var. rodriguesii [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Abarema curvicarpa var. rodriguesii Abarema curvicarpa" var. "rodriguesii is a vulnerable variety of legume, known only from the Adolfo Ducke Forest Reserve near Manaus in Brazil.
barbouriana" – Barbour abarema - "Abarema barbouriana" var. "barbouriana" - "Abarema brachystachya" - "Abarema callejasii" - "Abarema campestris" - "Abarema centiflora" - "Abarema cochleata" - "Abarema cochleata" var. "moniliformis" - "Abarema cochliocarpos" – Barbatimo - "Abarema commutata" - "Abarema curvicarpa" - "Abarema curvicarpa" var. "rodriguesii" - "Abarema ferruginea" - "Abarema filamentosa"
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Abronia chiszari [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Abronia chiszari Abronia chiszari is an endangered species of arboreal alligator lizard in the family Anguidae. The species is endemic to east-central Mexico. Taxonomy. "A. chiszari" was described in 1981 by Hobart Muir Smith and Rozella Blood Smith, his wife. Etymology. The specific name, "chiszari", is in honor of American herpetologist David Chiszar. Geographic range. "A. chiszari" is only found on the slopes of Volcano Santa Marta, in the Sierra de los Tuxtlas,
Abronia (lizard) Abronia is a genus of lizards in the family Anguidae endemic to the New World. Member species of this genus are found from Mexico through Central America to northeastern South America. Lizards of the genus "Abronia" are almost exclusively arboreal. Species. These species are recognized: - "Abronia anzuetoi" - "Abronia aurita" - "Abronia bogerti" - "Abronia campbelli" - "Abronia chiszari" - "Abronia cuetzpali" - "Abronia deppii
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Acanthastrea bowerbanki [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Homophyllia bowerbanki Homophyllia bowerbanki is a vulnerable species of coral found in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. This species is moderately common, but it is threatened by crown-of-thorns starfish predation and habitat loss. Description. "Homophyllia bowerbanki" is a small, encrusting coral but occasionally reach a diameter of over . The corallites are cerioid and have irregular shapes, and there is usually an obvious central one. The colour is often mottled and is generally reddish-brown, brown or grey. The corallites are
the Small Entrepreneur Programme – SEP– and uplifted the lives of countless plantation workers. These are only a few of over 100 projects the MJF Foundation implements each year. Sustainability. In 2007, Fernando extended his commitment to human service by establishing Dilmah Conservation www.dilmahconservation.org which focuses on working towards a more sustainable use of the environment in partnership with IUCN, the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The Dilmah Conservation initiative aims to foster respect for the environment and ensure its protection by encouraging a harmonious co-existence of man
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Acanthastrea brevis [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Acanthastrea brevis Acanthastrea brevis is a vulnerable species of stony coral found in reef habitats at depths of 1–20 m. It is threatened by habitat loss and crown-of-thorns starfish predation. It is particularly susceptible to coral bleaching and ocean acidification. Distribution. It is widespread and found from the waters of Madagascar and Saudi Arabia in the Indian Ocean to Micronesia and Samoa in the Pacific. Biology. "Acanthastrea brevis" is a zooxanthellate species of coral. It obtains most of its nutritional needs from
Acanthastrea Acanthastrea is a genus of large polyp stony corals in the family Lobophylliidae. The colonies are massive and usually flat. The corallites are either circular or angular in shape. The septa are thick near the wall of the corallite, becoming thin near the columella, and have tall teeth. The polyps are extended only at night. The genus contains the following species: - "Acanthastrea brevis" - "Acanthastrea echinata" - "Acanthastrea hemprichii" - "Acanthastrea minuta" - "Acanthastrea
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Aipysurus foliosquama [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Aipysurus foliosquama Aipysurus foliosquama, also known as the leaf-scaled sea snake, is a critically endangered species of venomous sea snake in the family Elapidae. It is endemic to the Ashmore and Cartier Islands of Australia. Taxonomy. The species was first described in 1926. The combination "Smithohydrophis foliosquama" (Kharin 1981) is recognised as a synonym. Description. The recorded length is around 800 millimetres and coloration is purple brown. A poorly known species, the diet is known to consist of
peronii" - "Aipysurus apraefrontalis" - "Aipysurus duboisii" (Dubois's Sea Snake) - "Aipysurus eydouxii" (Spine-tailed Sea Snake) - "Aipysurus foliosquama" - "Aipysurus fuscus" - "Aipysurus laevis" (Olive Sea Snake) - "Aipysurus tenuis" - "Astrotia stokesii" - "Disteira kingii" - "Disteira major" - "Disteira stokesii" - "Emydocephalus annulatus" - "Ephalophis greyi" -
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Alabama sturgeon [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Alabama sturgeon The Alabama sturgeon, "Scaphirhynchus suttkusi", is a critically endangered species of sturgeon native to the United States of America and now only believed to exist in of the lower Alabama River. The fish has a distinctive yellowish-orange color, grows to a size of about long and , and is believed to have a lifespan of 12 to 20 years. Biologists have known of the fish since the 1950s or 1960s, but the large diversity of aquatic species in Alabama prevented formal identification until 1991. Protected
adjacent Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, possibly established resident only in Florida and Mississippi. Brood. Adults occur in most of Florida from about March to November, apparently with several broods per year. Conservation status. The species has not been assessed for the IUCN Red List. NatureServe ranks the species with a rounded global conservation status of G3: vulnerable. The species may be extirpated in the Florida Keys. External links. - Watercolor of larval, chrysalis and adult forms by John Abbott:
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Allobates juanii [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Allobates juanii Allobates juanii is a species of frog in the Aromobatidae family. It is endemic to Colombia where it is only known from its type locality, a botanical garden in the city of Villavicencio, on the lower slopes of the eastern side of the Cordillera Oriental. "Allobates juanii" is on the list of critically endangered species of the IUCN because of habitat fragmentation and loss.
juanii and Allobates ranoides. Status. According to the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems the Llanos seasonal dry forests are considered "Endangered" due to historic declines in forest cover. The World Wildlife Fund gives the Apure-Villavicencio dry forests ecoregion a status of "Vulnerable". Much of the original habitat has been deforested and replaced by farms and livestock ranches. The illegal cultivation of coca has degraded the environment in Colombia. On the Venezuela-Colombia border oil refineries have polluted the groundwater and the
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Anolis grahami [SEP] IUCN conservation status
is out-competing the indigenous rock skink. "Anolis grahami" is listed as least concern by the IUCN. Distribution and habitat Habitat. "Anolis grahami" is highly arboreal and may be found in the uppermost branches of trees throughout its range. It is also common to see it on the trunks of tall trees, as well in shrubbery, on fence posts, the walls of houses, and other man made objects. Due to its arboreal habits, this lizard can be quite difficult to observe in its natural
garmani" – Jamaican giant anole - "Anolis garridoi" – Garrido's anole - "Anolis gemmosus" – Andes anole or O'Shaughnessy's anole - "Anolis gibbiceps" - "Anolis gingivinus" – Anguilla anole - "Anolis gonavensis" - "Anolis gorgonae" – blue anole - "Anolis gracilipes" – charm anole - "Anolis grahami" - "Anolis grahami aquarum" - "Anolis grahami grahami" - "Anolis granuliceps" - "Anolis greyi"
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Antilles catshark [SEP] IUCN conservation status
ovary, on the right, and two functional oviducts. A single egg matures inside each oviduct at a time. The egg is contained within a flask-shaped capsule measuring around long, across the top, and across the bottom; there are coiled tendrils at the upper two corners. Males and females attain sexual maturity at approximately and long respectively. Human interactions. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has listed the Antilles catshark under Data Deficient, as there is little known of deepwater fishery activities
crests, made of enlarged dermal denticles along both the dorsal and the ventral edges of the caudal fin. The Springer's sawtail catshark is oviparous. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) presently lacks the information to assess its conservation status. Taxonomy. The Springer's sawtail catshark was originally regarded as the striped color morph of the Antilles catshark ("G. antillensis", formerly "G. arae antillensis"). The first known specimen had resided in the National Museum of Natural History for over 20 years
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Arctic ground squirrel [SEP] IUCN conservation status
males. Gestation is approximately 25 days, and results in a litter of 5 to 10, hairless pups. After 6 weeks the pups are weaned and this is followed by rapid growth to prepare for the upcoming winter. Conservation. Although Environment Yukon has not estimated their population size, their conservation status is currently said to be "secure" (Environment Yukon 2013). The Arctic ground squirrel is classified as least concern (LC) on the IUCN Red List (Arkive 2013). Further reading.
average and adult females average . The Central American squirrel monkey has the most restricted range of any Costa Rican monkey, living only in secondary forests and partially logged primary forests on the central and south Pacific coast of Costa Rica, and on the Pacific coast of Panama near the Costa Rican border. In 2008, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) revised its conservation status to "vulnerable" after rating it "endangered" since 1982. The Central American squirrel monkey is most often seen in Manuel Antonio National Park
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Asiatic cheetah [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Asiatic cheetah The Asiatic cheetah ("Acinonyx jubatus venaticus"), also known as Iranian or Persian cheetah, is a Critically Endangered cheetah subspecies surviving today only in Iran. It once occurred from the Arabian Peninsula and the Near East to the Caspian region, Kyzylkum Desert, Pakistan and India, but has been extirpated there during the 20th century. The Asiatic cheetah survives in protected areas in the eastern-central arid region of Iran, where the human population density is very low. Between December 2011 and November 2013
East African cheetah - American cheetahs ("Miracinonyx") External links. - Species portrait Asiatic cheetah; IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group - Iranian Cheetah Society – A non-profit organisation set up to save the Asiatic cheetah. - Asiatic Cheetah Project – Felidae Conservation Fund, USA - Cheetah Conservation Fund - Iran Department of Environment - ScienceDaily 2011: The Need for Conservation of Asiatic Cheetahs - The Persian Cheetah - Spotted big cat in Turkmenistan - Asiatic cheetah embryos cloned
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Asiatic lion [SEP] IUCN conservation status
genetic pollution in the captive Asiatic lion stock. Once discovered, this led to the complete shutdown of the European and American endangered species breeding programs for Asiatic lions, as its founder animals were captive-bred Asiatic lions originally imported from India and were ascertained to be intraspecific hybrids of African and Asian lions. In North American zoos, several Indian-African lion crosses were inadvertently bred, and researchers noted that "the fecundity, reproductive success, and spermatozoal development improved dramatically." DNA fingerprinting studies of Asiatic lions have helped
Ex situ" conservation - "Panthera leo fossilis" - "Panthera spelaea" - "Damnatio ad bestias" Further reading. - Walker, S. (1994). "Executive summary of the Asiatic lion PHVA". First draft report. Zoo’s Print Jan/Feb: 2–22 (Coimbatore, India). External links. - IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group: Asiatic lion - The Telegraph, August 2018: Pride of India - Asiatic Lion Protection Society (ALPS)
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Astragalus tener [SEP] IUCN conservation status
pod up to long and usually containing two smooth seeds. Description Varieties. There are three varieties of this species. One, the coastal dunes milkvetch, Astragalus tener" var. "titi, is a rare plant treated as an endangered species on the federal level. It is probably now limited to coastal Monterey County, having been extirpated from its previous range in southern California. An example occurrence of "Astragalus tener" is within the two extant forests of Monterey Cypress, "Cupressus macrocarpa", in Monterey County
, "Bromopsis" and "Brachypodium" grasslands. The species is non-toxic and its common name in English comes from the popular belief in history that cows fed with purple milk-vetch yielded more milk. Conservation. "Astragalus danicus" has protected status. It is considered endangered by the IUCN. In the United Kingdom it has vulnerable status and has been a Biodiversity Action Plan priority species since 2007. "Astragalus danicus" has declined since the start of the enclosure farming system in the 18th
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Bennett's tree-kangaroo [SEP] IUCN conservation status
on chin, throat and lower abdomen. The forehead and muzzle are greyish. The feet and hands are black. The tail has a black patch at the base and a light patch on the upper part. The ears are short and rounded Conservation status. Although the IUCN still rates the status of Bennett's tree-kangaroo as "near threatened", its numbers seem to be increasing and its range expanding. Sightings have become far more common in recent years. In 2006 a dead specimen was found along Amos
Lowlands tree-kangaroo The lowlands tree-kangaroo or lowland tree-kangaroo ("Dendrolagus spadix") is a species of tree-kangaroo in the family Macropodidae. The marsupial is endemic to the Southern New Guinea lowland rain forests ecoregion in southwestern Papua New Guinea, on New Guinea island. - Conservation "Dendrolagus spadix" is an IUCN Red List Vulnerable species, threatened by habitat loss.
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Bohemian waxwing [SEP] IUCN conservation status
, sometimes fatally. Other hazards include predation by birds of prey, infestation by parasites and collisions with cars or windows. The Bohemian waxwing's high numbers and very large breeding area mean that it is classified as being of least concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Taxonomy. The waxwings are a family, Bombycillidae, of short-tailed stocky birds with soft plumage, a head crest and distinctively patterned wings and tails. There are three species, the Bohemian, cedar, and Japanese waxwings. DNA
parasitic worm infestation are generally low. Status. The global population of the Bohemian waxwing has been estimated at more than three million birds, and the breeding range covers about 12.8 million km (4.9 million mi). Although this species' population, as of 2013, appears to be declining, the decrease is not rapid nor large enough to trigger conservation vulnerability criteria. Given its high numbers and huge breeding area, this waxwing is therefore classified by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as
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Bornean white-bearded gibbon [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Bornean white-bearded gibbon The Bornean white-bearded gibbon, ("Hylobates albibarbis"), also known as the Bornean agile gibbon or southern gibbon, is an endangered species of gibbon endemic to southern Borneo due to the undergoing logging of the tropical forests, between the Kapuas and Barito rivers. Additional issues are of concern to the endangerment of white-bearded gibbons and threatening to other arboreal primates. The white-bearded gibbon is very similar to other gibbons in their behavior and their frugivorous diet. The Bornean
clawed otter, masked palm civet, otter civet, agile gibbon, southern pig-tailed macaque, crab-eating macaque, silvered leaf monkey, greater mouse deer, lesser mouse deer, wild boar, Bornean bearded pig, sambar deer, and previously the critically endangered Sumatran tiger. The reserve is also an important wetland for a number of bird species, including Storm's stork, white-winged duck and the great hornbill. Conservation and threats. Before the area was set aside for a wetland reserve in April
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Cebu flowerpecker [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Cebu flowerpecker The Cebu flowerpecker (Dicaeum quadricolor) is a small passerine bird. It is endemic to Cebu Island in the Philippines. The Cebu flowerpecker is a critically endangered breeding bird. It was feared to have become extinct early in the 20th century after the clearance of most of the island's forests, but was rediscovered in 1992 in a small patch of limestone forest in the Central Cebu Protected Landscape and has since been found at three other sites, namely, the Nug-as forest of Alcoy, Mount Lantoy
- Brown-backed flowerpecker, "Dicaeum everetti" - Whiskered flowerpecker, "Dicaeum proprium" - Yellow-vented flowerpecker, "Dicaeum chrysorrheum" - Yellow-bellied flowerpecker, "Dicaeum melanoxanthum" - White-throated flowerpecker, "Dicaeum vincens" - Yellow-sided flowerpecker, "Dicaeum aureolimbatum" - Olive-capped flowerpecker, "Dicaeum nigrilore" - Flame-crowned flowerpecker, "Dicaeum anthonyi" - Bicolored flowerpecker, "Dicaeum bicolor" - Cebu flowerpecker,
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Christmas shearwater [SEP] IUCN conservation status
y-Gómez, a nature sanctuary, was estimated at 5,000. With its wide range and considerable numbers, the Christmas shearwater is considered a species of least concern by the IUCN. References. - Austin, Jeremy J. (1996): Molecular Phylogenetics of "Puffinus" Shearwaters: Preliminary Evidence from Mitochondrial Cytochrome "b" Gene Sequences. "Mol. Phylogenet. Evol." 6(1): 77–88. (HTML abstract) - Seto, N.W.H. (2001): Christmas Shearwater ("Puffinus nativitatis"
77–88. (HTML abstract) - BirdLife International (BLI) (2008): [http://www.birdlife.org/action/science/species/global_species_programme/whats_new.html [2008 IUCN Redlist status changes]]. Retrieved 2008-MAY-23. - Genovart, Meritxell; Juste, Javier & Oro, Daniel (2005): Two sibling species sympatrically breeding: a new conservation concern for the critically endangered Balearic shearwater. "Conservation Genetics" 6(4): 601–606. PDF fulltext - Harrison, Peter (1988): "Seabirds" (2nd ed.). Christopher Helm, London -
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Coptodon bemini [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Coptodon bemini Coptodon bemini is a critically endangered species of fish in the cichlid family. It is endemic to Lake Bermin in Cameroon. It is threatened by pollution and sedimentation from human activities, and potentially also by large emissions of carbon dioxide (CO) from the lake's bottom (compare Lake Nyos), although Bermin is too shallow to contain very high amounts of this gas.
species in this genus: - "Coptodon bakossiorum" - "Coptodon bemini" - "Coptodon bythobates" - "Coptodon cameronensis" - "Coptodon camerunensis" - "Coptodon coffea" - "Coptodon congica" - "Coptodon dageti" - "Coptodon deckerti" - "Coptodon discolor" - "Coptodon ejagham" - "Coptodon flava" - "Coptodon fusiforme" - "Coptodon guineensis" (Guinean tilapia) - "Coptodon gutturosa"
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Cozumel raccoon [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Cozumel raccoon The Cozumel raccoon ("Procyon pygmaeus"), also called the pygmy raccoon, is a critically endangered species of island raccoon endemic on Cozumel Island off the coast of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. Other common names for the Cozumel raccoon include dwarf raccoon, Cozumel Island raccoon, and Cozumel raccoon bear. Classification. Clinton Hart Merriam first described the Cozumel raccoon as morphologically distinctive from its mainland relative, the common raccoon subspecies "Procyon lotor hernandezii", in 1901. Since then, other scientists
raccoon, the noticeable small teeth of the Cozumel raccoon suggest that it was separated from the mainland form long ago. The coat color of all island raccoons is gray or dark gray and on the underparts only few guard hairs cover the light brown ground hairs. Conservation. The last sighting of the Barbados raccoon occurred in 1964, when one specimen was killed by a car on a road near Bathsheba. All four extant populations were classified as endangered by the IUCN in 1996, since less than 2,500 mature individuals were living
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Craugastor lineatus [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Craugastor lineatus Craugastor lineatus, also known as the Montane robber frog, is a critically endangered frog in the family Craugastoridae. It is native to Guatemala and southern Mexico (Oaxaca and Chiapas). It lives in lower montane evergreen forests. This is a critically endangered species which has experienced a rapid population decline, probably as a result of the effects of chytridiomycosis.
Craugastor escoces Craugastor escoces is a species of frog in the family Craugastoridae. It is endemic to Costa Rica. After not having been seen after 1986—despite extensive directed surveys—it was declared extinct by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in 2004. However, the species was rediscovered in September 18, 2016, when two researchers from the University of Costa Rica found a female "Craugastor escoces" at the edge of the Juan Castro Blanco National Park in Alajuela Province. Habitat. Its natural habitats
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Cuban macaw [SEP] IUCN conservation status
been imported there; however, it has also been claimed that the painting shows the Jamaican red macaw. Rothschild's 1907 book "Extinct Birds" included a depiction of a specimen in the Liverpool Museum which was presented as a Cuban macaw. In a 1908 review of the book published in "The Auk", the reviewer claimed that the picture looked sufficiently dissimilar from known Cuban macaws that the specimen may actually be of one of the largely unknown species of macaw, such as a species from Haiti. The reviewer's objection
. In 2009, the conservation status of the species was downgraded to endangered from critically endangered by the IUCN. This was prompted by an increase in the population, which based on annual 2009 counts at the Toca Velha and Serra Branca roosting sites is estimated to be 1000 individuals. Aviculture. One of the earliest records (and one of very few at all) of a Lear's macaw in a public zoo was a dramatic display of "the four blues" including Lear's, glaucous, hyacinth, and Spix
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Dipterocarpus gracilis [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Dipterocarpus gracilis Dipterocarpus gracilis (Tagalog: "panao") is a critically endangered species of tree in the family Dipterocarpaceae, native to South Asia and Southeast Asia. The species is found in Kalimantan, Bangladesh, India (the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam and Tripura), Indonesia (Java, Kalimantan, Sumatra), Peninsular Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, the Philippines and Vietnam. This large tree is found in lowland seasonal semi-evergreen and evergreen dipterocarp forests. Uses.
Nehalennia gracilis Nehalennia gracilis, the sphagnum sprite, is a species of narrow-winged damselfly in the family Coenagrionidae. It is found in North America. The IUCN conservation status of "Nehalennia gracilis" is "LC", least concern, with no immediate threat to the species' survival. The population is stable.
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East Canary gecko [SEP] IUCN conservation status
are long from snout to vent. Their colouring is rather more vivid than that of the adults. Females mature at about long, and they have been known to live for 17 years in captivity. Research has shown that the sex of the embryo is determined by the temperature at which the egg is incubated. If this is or above the resulting offspring will be female but at lower temperatures it will be male. Conservation status. The East Canary gecko is listed as being of "least concern" in the IUCN
and supplemented by the Common Names and taxonomy from the IUCN where no Reptile Database article was available. The following tags are used to highlight specific species' conservation status as assessed by the IUCN: Order: Squamata (Snakes & Lizards). - Family: Gekkonidae (Geckos) - Genus: Afroedura - Inland Rock Gecko "Afroedura karroica" - Drakensberg Gecko "Afroedura nivaria" - Family: Cordylidae (Spinytail Lizards) - Genus: Cordylus - Lang's Crag Lizard "Cordylus
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Encephalartos sclavoi [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Encephalartos sclavoi Encephalartos sclavoi, common name Sclavo's cycad, is a critically endangered cycad in the family Zamiaceae. It is endemic to Tanzania, with a population of only ~50 mature plants. Description. "Encephalartos sclavoi" grows to about high. The leaves are long, dark green and semiglossy. Its seed cones are yellow, being long and in diameter. It was described in 1990 by Aldo Moretti, D.W. Stevenson and Paolo Deluca, honoring Jean Pierre Sclavo, a French collector of cycads, who
Encephalartos ituriensis Encephalartos ituriensis (common name "Ituri forest cycad") is a palm-like cycad of the family Zamiaceae. It is native to the grassland on two large granite monadnocks of the Ituri forest area in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Its IUCN conservation status is "Near Threatened." Description. This cycad grows to 6 metres tall with a trunk diameter of 50 cm. It has glossy dark green leaves. The leaflets are curved and tapering, with a spine at the top and
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Eriocaulon ratnagiricum [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Eriocaulon ratnagiricum Eriocaulon ratnagiricum is a critically endangered monocotyledonous plant only recorded near Ratnagiri in the state of Maharashtra, India. It is a small annual which grows on the edges of temporary pools on lateritic plateaus.
- "Eriocaulon pygmaeum" – WA, NT, Qld, Australia - "Eriocaulon quinquangulare" - "Eriocaulon ratnagiricum" - "Eriocaulon ravenelii" - "Eriocaulon richardianum" - "Eriocaulon ritchieanum" - "Eriocaulon robustius" - "Eriocaulon robustobrownianum" - "Eriocaulon robustum" - "Eriocaulon rockianum" - "Eriocaulon rouxianum" - "Eriocaulon sahyadricum" - "Eriocaulon santapaui" - "Eriocaulon scariosum" – Qld, NSW, ACT, Vic.
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Eriocaulon rouxianum [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Eriocaulon rouxianum Eriocaulon rouxianum is a critically endangered monocotyledonous plant endemic to Mumbai and Nashik in the state of Maharashtra, India. It has not been recorded since 1982.
- "Eriocaulon pygmaeum" – WA, NT, Qld, Australia - "Eriocaulon quinquangulare" - "Eriocaulon ratnagiricum" - "Eriocaulon ravenelii" - "Eriocaulon richardianum" - "Eriocaulon ritchieanum" - "Eriocaulon robustius" - "Eriocaulon robustobrownianum" - "Eriocaulon robustum" - "Eriocaulon rockianum" - "Eriocaulon rouxianum" - "Eriocaulon sahyadricum" - "Eriocaulon santapaui" - "Eriocaulon scariosum" – Qld, NSW, ACT, Vic.
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Erioderma pedicellatum [SEP] IUCN conservation status
on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) and critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). No other lichen is listed by the IUCN but one fungus is considered critically endangered by the IUCN ("Pleurotus nebrodensis"). Two of the main populations of "Erioderma pedicellatum" in Newfoundland are currently within protected areas: Jipujijkuei Kuespem Provincial Park and the Lockyer’s Waters interim protected area. The Lockyer’s Waters interim protected area was established specifically to protect this lichen. The Bay
before it reaches a visible size. The liverwort may also benefit from the nitrogen that is being fixed by the cyanolichen growing within it. This complex relationship means that the ecological balance between "Erioderma pedicellatum" and its cyanobacterial symbiont ("Scytonema"), its host tree, and (potentially) its liverwort nursemaid ("Frullania asagrayana"), is very delicate and easily impacted by logging, air pollution, and other factors. Conservation status. "Erioderma pedicellatum" is currently listed as endangered by the Committee
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Eupsophus insularis [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Eupsophus insularis Eupsophus insularis is a critically endangered species of frog in the Alsodidae family. It is endemic to Mocha Island in Chile, where found in temperate mixed forests. It is threatened by habitat loss. References. - Veloso, A., Núñez, H., Núñez, J. & Ortiz, J.C. 2004. Eupsophus insularis. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 22 July 2007.
Cannaphila insularis Cannaphila insularis, the gray-waisted skimmer, is a species of skimmer in the family Libellulidae. It is found in the Caribbean, Central America, and North America. The IUCN conservation status of "Cannaphila insularis" is "LC", least concern, with no immediate threat to the species' survival. The population is stable. Subspecies. These two subspecies belong to the species "Cannaphila insularis". - "Cannaphila insularis funerea" - "Cannaphila insularis insularis"
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European eel [SEP] IUCN conservation status
species' lifespan in the wild has not been determined, captive specimens have lived over 80 years. According to a report in The Local, a specimen lived 155 years in the well of a family home in Brantevik, a fishing village in southern Sweden. Conservation status. The European eel is a critically endangered species. Since the 1970s, the numbers of eels reaching Europe is thought to have declined by around 90% (possibly even 98%). Contributing factors include overfishing, parasites such as "Anguillicola crassus
during the first year, with few individuals surviving to the second breeding season. Conservation status. As of 2002, five species were listed by the IUCN as species of special concern: "Macrognathus aral" (the one-stripe spiny eel), "Monopterus boueti" (Liberian swamp eel), "Monopterus indicus" (Bombay swamp eel), and "Ophisternon candidum" (the blind cave eel) have been classified as Data Deficient, meaning that they require more study to determine their conservation status.
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Hoffmann's pika [SEP] IUCN conservation status
tree roots. Conservation and Decline. The primary threat to this species is climate change, as pikas are very sensitive to temperature changes. Pikas can die within six hours after exposure to temperatures above 25.5 °C (77.9 °F). The limited geographic range of Hoffmann's pika, only 600 km, puts the species at a greater risk of extinction. While the IUCN lists Hoffmann's pika as an endangered species, there are currently no known conservation efforts underway, perhaps because the ecological consequences
Hoffmann's pika Hoffmann's pika ("Ochotona hoffmanni") is a species of mammal in the pika family, Ochotonidae, that is endemic to Mongolia. It is currently listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Etymology. The word “pika” was first coined by the Evenks of Siberia to describe the calls pikas use to communicate with each other. The genus name of Hoffmann's pika, "Ochotona", was inspired by “ogdai,” the term Mongolians
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Huon astrapia [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Huon astrapia The Huon astrapia ("Astrapia rothschildi") is a species of bird-of-paradise. This little known bird-of-paradise is distributed and endemic to the mountain forests of Huon Peninsula, Papua New Guinea. Its diet consists mainly of fruits and seeds. The scientific name commemorates the British ornithologist Walter Rothschild. A common species in its limited habitat range, the Huon astrapia is evaluated as least concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. It is listed on Appendix II
birds of paradise (including the endemic Huon astrapia). There are also endemic butterflies. Although some logging has taken place, the forests of the Huon Peninsula mountains are mostly undisturbed. Conservation. The raised beach coastal terraces of Huon were added to the UNESCO World Heritage Tentative List on June 6, 2006 in the Mixed (Cultural + Natural) category. In 2009 the YUS Conservation Area was established in the northern part of the peninsula. YUS stretches over 760 km² and includes the three rivers, Yopno
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Irenomys [SEP] IUCN conservation status
. Litter size is three to six. The animal mostly eats seeds and fruits, but its diet also includes various other plant and fungal materials. Conservation status. "Irenomys" is not currently threatened and it is classified as "least concern" by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. It occurs in several protected areas, but destruction of its forest habitat may pose a threat to some populations. Literature cited. - D'Elía, G., Luna, L., González, E.M. and Patterson,
Irenomys tarsalis" (Rodentia, Cricetidae, Sigmodontinae). Mastozoología Neotropical 11(1):95–98. - Osgood, W.H. 1943. The mammals of Chile. Fieldiana Zoology 30:1–268. - Pardinas, U., Patterson, B., D'Elia, G. and Teta, P. 2008. . In IUCN. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.2. «a href="https%3A//web.archive.org/web/20140627094911/http%3A//www.iucnredlist.org/"www.iucnredlist.org/a». Downloaded on November 6, 2009. - Smith, M.F. and Patton, J.L. 1999. Phylogenetic relationships and the radiation of sigmodontine
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Isachne veldkampii [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Isachne veldkampii Isachne veldkampii is a critically endangered species of herb endemic to the Western Ghats of India. It has been reported from Manipal in Udupi district in the state of Karnataka.
boots, rain gear and uniforms. - Conservation related award programs were announced to boost the morale of the staff. - Training programs were undertaken for the staff in the use of firearms against poachers, field craft and Indian wildlife laws Recently discovered species. Many areas of Karnataka, especially in the forests of Malnad region are unexplored and new species of flora and fauna are discovered periodically. Some of the new species of flora discovered in Karnataka include "Paracautleya bhatii" (a ginger) and "Isachne veldkampii
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Isoetes sinensis [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Isoetes sinensis Isoetes sinensis, the narrow quillwort, is a species of plant in the family Isoetaceae. Information. "Isoetes sinensis" is native to China and Korea. Its natural habitat is swamps. It is threatened by habitat loss. This species is native to China in the areas of Anhui, Jiangsu, and Zhejiang. Conservation. "Isoetes sinensis" is recorded to be a critically endangered species due to industrial development and agricultural expansion. This species occupies freshwater environments and within terrestrial systems. In
China. At present, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) does not have sufficient information to assess its conservation status beyond Data Deficient. Taxonomy. The Chinese stingray was originally described as "Trygon sinensis" by Austrian Franz Steindachner, in an 1892 volume of the scientific journal "Denkschriften der Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftlichen Classe der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien". The type specimen is a male across, collected from Shanghai, China. Distribution and habitat. The Chinese stingray has been recorded along
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Jamaican flower bat [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Jamaican flower bat The Jamaican flower bat ("Phyllonycteris aphylla") is a critically endangered species of bat in the family Phyllostomidae. It is endemic to Jamaica. Taxonomy and etymology. It was described by American zoologist Gerrit Smith Miller in 1898. He initially placed it in the genus "Reithronycteris", which is now synonymous with "Phyllonycteris". The specimen that he described was collected in Jamaica; the date of collection and the exact location are unknown. They type specimen used to describe
consists of fewer than 50 individuals, and its population size is likely in decline. The Jamaican flower bat used to occur in five or six caves, but now only occurs in two. Part of its decline in St. Clair Cave may be attributed to the population of feral cats living in the cave and preying on bats. Its estimated area of occupancy is . From 2008-2015, the IUCN had listed this species as least concern, which is the lowest risk level of extinction. This species
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Japanese sawshark [SEP] IUCN conservation status
information on population size or frequency of bycatch, the Japanese sawshark is listed by the IUCN Red List as being Data Deficient. It is not clear if this shark's apparent rarity is because of natural reasons, or because the population has already been depleted. Due to its benthic lifestyle, and because the range of this shark is heavily fished, it is safe to assume that the Japanese sawshark is at considerable risk of being caught as bycatch in bottom trawling and gillnet operations. Because of its habitat and behavior, this shark
, at depths reaching . Behavior. Very little is known about the biology of the African dwarf sawshark. It would appear, based on the stomach samples taken in the field, that these sharks favor benthic invertebrates like small crustaceans. Nothing is known about the reproductive habits of this sawshark, though it is safe to assume that like other members of Pristiophoriformes it is ovoviviparous. Conservation. As the African dwarf sawshark was only recently discovered in 2011, the IUCN Red List has yet to evaluate the conservation status
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Jefferson salamander [SEP] IUCN conservation status
which exude a whitish liquid when they are handled, suggesting that they may leave a scent trail during migration, "Ambystoma jeffersonianum" is often found in the same habitat as the spotted salamander. Food. The larvae are carnivorous, typically consuming aquatic invertebrates. An insufficient food supply may result in cannibalistic behaviour. Adults are also carnivorous, eating a variety of small invertebrates. Status. The Jefferson salamander is a species of least concern globally, but its habitat is threatened in parts of its range. In
List of amphibians of Canada This is a list of amphibians of Canada. Conservation status - IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: Order Caudata, salamanders. Order Caudata, salamanders Genus "Aneides". - "Aneides vagrans" – Wandering Salamander Order Caudata, salamanders Genus "Ambystoma". - "Ambystoma jeffersonianum" – Jefferson Salamander - "Ambystoma gracile" – Northwestern Salamander - "Ambystoma laterale" – Blue-spotted Salamander - "Ambystoma maculatum" – Spotted Salamander - "
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Leptoxis ampla [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Leptoxis ampla Leptoxis ampla, common name the round rocksnail, is a species of freshwater snail with a gill and an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Pleuroceridae. This species is endemic to the United States, specifically the state of Alabama. The snail has been listed as threatened on the United States Fish and Wildlife Service list of endangered species since 28 October 1998. "Leptoxis ampla" is a vulnerable species according to the IUCN Red list. Description. The round rocksnail is a pleurocerid
Leptoxis Leptoxis is a genus of freshwater snails with a gill and an operculum, aquatic gastropod mollusks in the family Pleuroceridae. Species within this genus inhabit rocky fast-flowing parts of unpolluted and unimpounded mid-sized rivers in the American mid South and the southern Midwest. Species in the subgenus "Mudalia" inhabit rivers and creeks in the Atlantic drainage. Species. Species within the genus "Leptoxis" include. Those that are extinct are marked with a dagger †. - "Leptoxis ampla" -
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Madagascan grebe [SEP] IUCN conservation status
. The Madagascan grebe probably feeds mostly on insects, but is also known to take small fish and crustaceans. It is generally sedentary, but will move in search of more suitable habitat. The breeding season may span the months of August to March. Although breeding pairs are typically territorial, communally nesting groups of 150 individuals have been recorded. Nests are built on a floating structure of aquatic plants, anchored to offshore vegetation, normally waterlilies. Threats. The Madagascan grebe is currently classified as vulnerable by the IUCN
Madagascan grebe The Madagascan grebe ("Tachybaptus pelzelnii") is a grebe found only in western and central Madagascar. The binomial name commemorates the Austrian ornithologist August von Pelzeln. It is classified as endangered by the IUCN, with a population of less than 5,000. It is threatened by habitat loss, predation by carnivorous fish, and competition with introduced species. Description. The Madagascan grebe is around 25 cm long. It can be identified in its breeding plumage, consisting of a blackish cap and line down
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Manchurian bush warbler [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Manchurian bush warbler The Manchurian bush warbler ("Horornis canturians"), also known as Korean bush warbler, is a species of bird in the family Cettiidae. It is found in northeastern China. The estimated distribution size is reported to be a large range – approximately 1,610,000 km. Although the global population has not been measured, the population trend appears to be stable. Because of this, the Manchurian bush warbler is evaluated as a least concern species.
Taiwan bush warbler The Taiwan bush warbler ("Locustella alishanensis") is a species of Old World warbler in the family Locustellidae. It is found only in Taiwan. Its natural habitat is undergrowth and grassland in elevation. It was first recorded in 1917 and named as a distinct species in 2000. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has assessed it as a least-concern species. Taxonomy. This bush warbler was first recorded from Alishan in 1917. At first, it was thought to
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Potato cod [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Potato grouper The potato grouper ("Epinephelus tukula"), also called the potato cod or potato bass, is a least concern fish as labeled by the IUCN Red List, and a native fish in Australia The potato grouper is also a native to many other Asian countries. It can reach a length of 2.6m and can weigh as much as 110kg. Location. "Epinephelus tukula" is not a common species where fishing is known to occur, but may be more common in unfished areas.
on the Mann and Nymboida Rivers and their tributaries between August and October each year specifically to prevent this. Conservation status. Following heavy declines in numbers and distribution, the eastern freshwater cod is currently classified as endangered by the IUCN. Conservation status Population decline. Early records show that eastern freshwater cod were extremely abundant in the all parts of the Clarence River system at the time of European settlement. They were so abundant that they were caught "on demand" for diners at one riverside hotel, and were reportedly
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Preuss's monkey [SEP] IUCN conservation status
monkey is an endangered species, due to habitat loss and hunting. It is one of the species that live in the Guinean Forests of the West Africa Biodiversity Hotspot. Preuss's monkey is known to occur in captivity only at the Centre for Education, Rehabilitation, and Conservation of Primates and Nature (CERCOPAN) in Cross River State, Nigeria. There are two subspecies of Preuss's monkey: - Cameroon Preuss's monkey, "Cercopithecus preussi preussi" - Bioko Preuss's monkey, "Cercopithecus preussi insularis
at 1.2 to 3.3 encounters per square kilometer, are among the highest in Africa. Five of the primate species are of global conservation concern: Preuss's monkey, red-eared guenon, black colobus, western red colobus and drill. The reserve may be home to the largest surviving population of drill. According to the Primate Specialist Group of the IUCN Species Survival Commission, the island is the most important location in Africa for conserving diversity of primates. Pennant's colobus, a type of red colobus, is one
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Przewalski's gazelle [SEP] IUCN conservation status
of the most endangered species of large mammal on Earth. The many threats against the species include competition with domestic livestock and fencing of the natural habitat. These problems have become exacerbated as the area is increasingly developed as agricultural land. While now protected by Chinese law, and illegal hunting no longer is considered an important factor, a large percentage of the habitat of this species has already been lost due to human activities. Consequently, it is considered to be an endangered species by the IUCN. Formerly, it was believed
Minn: ABDO Pub. Co, 2006. Print. - Wakefield, S., Knowles, J., Zimmermann, W. and Van Dierendonck, M. 2002. "Status and action plan for the Przewalski's Horse ("Equus ferus przewalski")". In: P.D. Moehlman (ed.) "Equids: Zebras, Asses and Horses. Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan", pp. 82–92. IUCN/SSC Equid Specialist Group. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK. -
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Puntius deccanensis [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Deccan barb Puntius deccanensis, the "Deccan barb", is a critically endangered species of ray-finned fish in the genus Puntius. It is endemic to the Northern Western Ghats in India.
- "Puntius chola" (Swamp barb) - "Puntius crescentus" - "Puntius deccanensis" (Deccan barb) - "Puntius dolichopterus" (Longfin Kerala barb) - "Puntius dorsalis" (Long-snouted barb) - "Puntius fraseri" (Dharna barb) - "Puntius kamalika" - "Puntius kelumi" - "Puntius khohi" - "Puntius layardi" - "Puntius madhusoodani" - "Puntius mahecola" (Mahecola barb) -
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Rafinesque's big-eared bat [SEP] IUCN conservation status
to be 79 cm with a height of 18.5m). Rafinesque's big-eared bats can also be found in abandoned buildings, under bridges, in wells, and in caves. Conservation status. While listed as least concern by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (previously listed as vulnerable), Rafinesque's big-eared bats are listed as a Candidate II Species of Concern by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Additionally, it is listed as threatened by state agencies throughout most of its
Rafinesque's big-eared bat Rafinesque's big-eared bat ("Corynorhinus rafinesquii"), sometimes known as the southeastern big-eared bat, is a species of vesper bat native to the southeastern United States. Description. As its name implies, this species has large ears that are over an inch long. The genus name "Corynorhinus" means "club-nosed." Similar to the Townsend's big-eared bat, this species has two lumps on either side of its nose. Rafinesque
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Rhacophorus lateralis [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Rhacophorus lateralis Rhacophorus lateralis is an endangered rhacophorid tree frog endemic to the Western Ghats in South India. It has several common names: small tree frog, Boulenger's tree frog, small gliding frog, and winged gliding frog. After its original description in 1883 by George Albert Boulenger, the frog was rediscovered in Coorg in 2000 and has since been found in many parts of the Western Ghats around southern Karnataka and northern Kerala. Along with "R. malabaricus", it is one of the few anuran amphibians in India that
"Microhyla borneensis", "M. palmipes", "Polypedates macrotis" and "Rhacophorus appendiculatus". A young triangle keelback snake ("Xenochrophis trianguligerus") was observed to feed on the eggs. Its conservation status has not been assessed by the IUCN. However, the IUCN followed a recent study, according to which "R. tunkui" was a junior synonym of "R. prominanus". The synonymy, however, was subsequently criticized for severe methodological flaws: "... the justifications provided by Harvey "
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Roti Island snake-necked turtle [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Roti Island snake-necked turtle The Roti Island snake-necked turtle ("Chelodina mccordi" ), also commonly known as McCord's snakeneck turtle, is a critically endangered turtle species from Rote Island in Indonesia. Taxonomy. "Chelodina mccordi" belongs to the genus "Chelodina" (Australian snake-necked turtles) within the family Chelidae (Austro-South American side-necked turtles). "Chelodina mccordi" was originally described from Rote Island but was later split into three subspecies. "Chelodina
The Roti Island snake-necked turtle is one of the most desired turtles in the international pet trade. Even before it was scientifically described it was so over-collected that the legal trade was prohibited in 2001 due to its rarity. The two or three remaining populations live in an area of only 70 km² (27 square miles) in the central highlands of Rote Island. It is still illegally captured and it is often offered on markets under the label of the New Guinea snake-necked turtle which is also legally
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Salvelinus evasus [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Salvelinus evasus Salvelinus evasus, is a vulnerable deepwater char or trout living in the Ammersee lake in Bavaria, Southern Germany. This fish lives in the great depths of the lake, below 80 m. It can reach up to a foot in length, about 30 cm. "Salvelinus evasus" has a blunt snout and the mouth in subinferior position. Its flanks are silvery to yellowish, often with paler spots. Unlike other deepwater char species its lower fins have white margins. Deepwater char are highly sensitive to
changes in the quality of the water and some species such as "Salvelinus neocomensis" and "Salvelinus profundus" were driven recently to extinction in other European lakes. External links. - Revue Suisse de Zoologie - Salvelinus evasus - Picture of "Salvelinus evasus" - First assessment of the national conservation responsibility for freshwater lampreys and fishes in Germany - Fisheries in Upper Bavaria, the Deepwater Char (in German)
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Salvelinus umbla [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Europe, between France and Austria and between Germany and Northern Italy. It has been introduced in high altitude lakes as well. Although it is assessed as a least concern species by IUCN, the eutrophication of the lakes in the Subalpine region, which began in the 1950s and peaked in 1979, badly affected "Salvelinus umbla" populations, which crashed during that period. The lake char became locally extinct in lakes such as Mondsee and other char species, such as "Salvelinus profundus", were driven to extinction in the
364: 560. HTML fulltext External links. - USGS Nonindigenous Aquatic Fish Database - IUCN Salvelinus umbla
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Savi's warbler [SEP] IUCN conservation status
seldom seen on open ground. It occupies similar habitats in its winter quarters but may also be found in fens or marshy locations with open water away from reeds. Status. Savi's warbler is assessed by the IUCN in their Red List of Threatened Species as being of least concern. This is because it has a large total population and an extensive range. The population in Europe is estimated to be between 530 and 800 thousand breeding pairs with a total of 1.6 to 2.4 million individuals. As Europe amounts to about
the Maricao State Forest. An IUCN assessment of the elfin woods warbler, prepared in 2000, estimated a stable population of 600 mature individuals. More recently the population has been estimated to comprise at least 1800 mature individuals, a figure which equates to at least 2700 individual birds. Status and conservation Threats. The survival of the elfin woods warbler faces two main threats, predation and the destruction or alteration of suitable habitat. Confirmed native predators are the pearly-eyed thrasher ("Margarops fuscatus"), the Puerto Rican
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Shorea falcifera [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Shorea falcifera Shorea falcifera is an endangered species of plant in the Dipterocarpaceae family. Distribution. It is found in Sumatra, Peninsular Malaysia and Borneo. See also. - List of Shorea species
- "Shorea falcifera" - "Shorea glauca" - "Shorea gratissima" - "Shorea henryana" - "Shorea leprosula", Meranti - "Shorea maxima" - "Shorea maxwelliana" - "Shorea obscura" - "Shorea ovata" - "Shorea pauciflora" - "Shorea platyclados" - "Shorea quadrinervis" - "Shorea roxburghii" - "Shorea splendida" - "Shorea stenoptera" - "Shorea submontana" -
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Siamese tigerfish [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Siamese tigerfish The Siamese tigerfish ("Datnioides pulcher") is a critically endangered Asian fish native to the Chao Phraya, Mae Klong and Mekong basins. It has vertical yellow and black stripes running the length of its body. The dorsal fin has a spiny appearance. Siamese tigerfish grow to in standard length. The many species within "Datnioides" are quite commonly confused. "Datnioides pulcher" is the Siamese tigerfish, or wide-bar datnoid. "Datnioides microlepis" is the Indonesian tiger datnoid. "Datnioides
polota" is the silver datnoid. In the aquarium. It prefers a pH of 7.6–8.0, and a temperature of 22–26 °C (72–79 °F). The Siamese tigerfish is predatory and will eat smaller fish, various live foods, and frozen foods. Many hobbyists pellet-train their datnoids to reduce the risk of disease and parasites from live food. Captive ones are generally smaller than their wild counterparts, though may still require a large aquarium. Conservation status. "D. pulcher"
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Siau scops owl [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Siau scops owl The Siau scops owl ("Otus siaoensis") is a critically endangered owl and may be extinct. They live on Siau Island, north of Sulawesi, Indonesia and are (were) forest dwellers. The species is only known from a single holotype from 1866 although there have been some local reports in recent years. Even so, their habitat is being lost to excessive logging of the forest on the island and there would be very few if any individuals left. The taxonomic arrangement for this owl
although it has been seen up to . It sometimes frequents partially logged forests of "Dipterocarpaceae" species. Status and conservation. The giant scops owl is rated as "Vulnerable" by the IUCN in its Red List of Threatened Species. This is because the population is declining as its forest habitat is destroyed by deforestation and by the mining of chromite. This bird was never a common species and it is thought that in 1999 there were between 3,500 and 15,000 individuals remaining. Of the three islands on which it is
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Springer's sawtail catshark [SEP] IUCN conservation status
at the upper two corners. Adult males have yet to be captured; the largest immature male measured long. Females are mature by a length of . Human interactions. The International Union for Conservation of Nature has listed the Springer's sawtail catshark under Data Deficient, as there is little information on fishery activities within its geographic and depth range. Given its restricted range, it may be negatively affected by any expansion of deepwater fisheries in the region. It is occasionally caught in bottom trawls.
crests, made of enlarged dermal denticles along both the dorsal and the ventral edges of the caudal fin. The Springer's sawtail catshark is oviparous. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) presently lacks the information to assess its conservation status. Taxonomy. The Springer's sawtail catshark was originally regarded as the striped color morph of the Antilles catshark ("G. antillensis", formerly "G. arae antillensis"). The first known specimen had resided in the National Museum of Natural History for over 20 years
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Stresemann's bristlefront [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Stresemann's bristlefront The Stresemann's bristlefront ("Merulaxis stresemanni") is a critically endangered species of bird in the Rhinocryptidae family. It is endemic to Brazil. Description. This is a medium-sized, long-tailed bird with distinctive forehead bristles. It measures . The male is all slaty-plumbeous with dark rufous-chestnut rump, uppertail-coverts and vent. The namesake features are long, pointed bristles on the forehead. The female is cinnamon-brown above, with a duskier tail,
) - ICMBio status Family Grallariidae (antpittas) - "Grallaria varia distincta" (Variegated antpitta) - ICMBio status - "Grallaria varia intercedens" (Variegated antpitta) - ICMBio status - "Hylopezus paraensis" (Snethlage's antpitta) - ICMBio status Family Rhinocryptidae (tapaculos) - "Eleoscytalopus psychopompus" (Bahia tapaculo) - ICMBio status - "Merulaxis stresemanni" (Stresemann's bristlefront) - ICMBio status - "Scytalopus diamantinensis" (Diamantina tapaculo) - ICMBio status -
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São Tomé olive pigeon [SEP] IUCN conservation status
São Tomé olive pigeon The São Tomé olive pigeon or maroon pigeon ("Columba thomensis") is an endangered species of pigeon which is endemic to the island of São Tomé off the coast of west Africa. It was described by José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage in 1888. Description. The bird is long. Distribution. The olive pigeon occurs in several parts of the island of São Tomé, including the northwest (Chamiço), the central massif (Lagoa Amelia, Zampalma, Nova Ceilão, Bombaim
with white chin and eyebrows. It sometimes call during the day. Conservation and status. The continued survival of the São Tomé scops owl depends upon stopping habitat loss in the remaining lowland rainforest of São Tomé, as does the survival of three other birds: the São Tomé ibis, São Tomé olive pigeon, and São Tomé oriole. See also. - Wildlife of São Tomé and Príncipe. External links. - BirdLife Species Factsheet.
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Taylor's garden eel [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Conservation status. The IUCN redlist currently lists Taylor's garden eel as Data Deficient, due to a lack of information on the population statistics. It is suspected that the population, due to its tendency to inhabit seagrass meadows, may be at risk on behalf of threats affecting seagrass in the region of Indonesia.
Raitt's sand eel fishing has been debated. Census data has shown that seabird populations as a whole are not negatively impacted by sand eel fisheries. Some has suggested that the observed declines in seabirds such as puffins were isolated incidences that do not represent the whole population. Conservation status. The Raitt's sand eel is currently not assessed by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
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Telmatobius gigas [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Telmatobius gigas Telmatobius gigas is a critically endangered species of frog in the Telmatobiidae family. It is endemic to the Huayllamarca River at an altitude of about in the Carangas Province in Bolivia. Its tiny range makes it highly vulnerable to pollution, and it may also be threatened by over-harvesting for medicinal use and the disease chytridiomycosis. As suggested by its scientific name, this is a very large species of frog with a snout-vent length of up to in females (males are smaller). In the genus "
concern, such as Schlegel's asity "(Philepitta schlegeli)" which is classified by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as near threatened due to habitat loss. Other resident birds include the giant coua ("Coua gigas"), Coquerel's coua ("Coua coquereli"), sickle-billed vanga ("Falculea palliata") and the Sakalava weaver ("Ploceus sakalava"). Of the fifteen species of mammal on the reserve, five are lemurs. Verreaux's sifaka ("
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Tor putitora [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Tor putitora Tor putitora, the Putitor mahseer, Himalayan mahseer, or golden mahseer, is an endangered species of cyprinid fish that is found in rapid streams, riverine pools, and lakes in the Himalayan region and southern Asia, ranging from Iran south to Sri Lanka, and east to Thailand. It is a popular gamefish, the largest species of mahseer, and can reach up to in length and in weight, though most caught today are far smaller. It is threatened by habitat loss, habitat degradation and overfishing,
type locality of Tor tambroides is the Indonesian island of Sumatra. Ecology. The species is omnivorous, sometimes eating toxic fruits when the streams it inhabits flood the forest; this may make them temporarily inedible. During the rainy season, juveniles migrate downstream. After 2 months, matured adults travel back upstream to spawn at the headwaters in the dry season. Conservation. While the species is not currently assigned a conservation status by the IUCN due to lack of data, overfishing is assumed to threaten the wild population
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Abronia campbelli [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Abronia campbelli Abronia campbelli, commonly known as Campbell's alligator lizard, is species of critically endangered arboreal alligator lizard in the family Anguidae. "Abronia campbelli" is endemic to eastern Guatemala. Etymology. The specific name, "campbelli", is in honor of American herpetologist Jonathan A. Campbell. Further reading. - Brodie ED Jr, Savage RF (1993). "A new species of "Abronia" (Squamata: Anguidae) from a dry oak forest in eastern Guatemala". "Herpetologica
Anzuetoi arboreal alligator lizard Anzueto's arboreal alligator lizard (Abronia anzuetoi ) is a species of lizards in the family Anguidae. The species is endemic to Volcán de Agua in Guatemala. Etymology. The specific name, "anzuetoi" is in honor of Guatemalan naturalist Roderico Anzueto, who collected the holotype. Conservation status. The extent of occurrence of "A. anzuetoi" is approximately 24 km (9.3 mi), and thus the species is considered Vulnerable by the IUCN. Anthropogenic impact is minimized
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Alabama cavefish [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Alabama cavefish The Alabama cavefish ("Speoplatyrhinus poulsoni"), is a critically endangered species of amblyopsid cavefish found only in underground pools in Key Cave, located in northwestern Alabama, United States in the Key Cave National Wildlife Refuge. It was discovered underneath a colony of gray bats in 1967 and scientifically described in 1974. On any single visit to the cave, no more than 10 individuals of this fish have been observed, and scientists estimate fewer than 100 are left. This fish is believed to be the rarest
Spring cavefish are oviparous; however, the eggs are carried in gill chambers of the females. Females produce roughly 100 young per female. The average spring cavefish lives for about three years and typically reaches a length of about 1.8 to 2.6 in. Conservation. The status and distribution of cave-obligate species is incomplete or lacking entirely, which makes conservation and management decisions difficult. This species is listed as endangered in Missouri. The IUCN Red List considers the spring cavefish to be of least concern due to its
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Alcolapia grahami [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Alcolapia grahami Alcolapia grahami, the Lake Magadi tilapia or Graham's cichlid, is a vulnerable species of fish in the Cichlidae family. It is specialised to live in hot, alkaline waters in springs and lagoons around hypersaline lakes. Description. "Alcolapia grahami" is sexually dimorphic, the mature females are golden in colour while the males have pale blue flanks. In the mature males the sides of the mouth have swollen, brilliant white patches and blue iridescent spots on their scales. The males' genital papillae are
Alcolapia Alcolapia is a genus of small fishes in the Cichlidae family. Their native range is restricted to margins of the hypersaline, warm () Lake Natron and Lake Magadi, as well as similar conditions in nearby hot springs, in Kenya and Tanzania. Two species have been introduced to Lake Nakuru. Species. There are currently four recognized species in this genus: - "Alcolapia alcalica" (Magadi tilapia) - "Alcolapia grahami" - "Alcolapia latilabris" - "Alcolapia ndalalani"
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Argentine swamp rat [SEP] IUCN conservation status
. Conservation. According to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species in 2008 the Argentine swamp rat was classified as least concern because of “its wide distribution, presumed large population, and because it is unlikely to be declining at nearly the rate required to qualify for listing in a threatened category.” Habitat. These rodents are found in low, flooded grasslands, salt marshes and any area with standing water. They are good swimmers and employ the aid of their “swimming fringe” and have also been
2002, Braun and Mares from the University of Oklahoma examined this specimen and confirmed it to be a separate species. Not enough is known about this species for the IUCN to assess its conservation status. Taxonomy. The species was first described in 1920 by the British zoologist Oldfield Thomas, working at the Natural History Museum, London. It is named in honour of Emilio Budin, an Argentine specimen collector who worked with Oldfield Thomas. Ellerman, in 1940, considered Budin's chinchilla rat to be a subspecies of
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Barau's petrel [SEP] IUCN conservation status
petrels begin to return to their colonies diurnally, returning in the late afternoon and riding the thermal updrafts to conserve energy. The chicks fledge between November and February. Sites which have been identified by BirdLife International as being important for the conservation of the species include the Grand Bénard – Tapcal and Piton des Neiges – Gros Morne Important Bird Areas (IBAs) on Réunion where breeding colonies exist. Status and conservation. Barau's petrel is considered to be an endangered species. It has a highly restricted breeding range and has
Fregetta grallaria grallaria" and "Fregetta grallaria titan" in the eastern Pacific have been described as “meagre”. The white bellied storm petrel is considered to be rare in New Zealand with an estimated 700 nesters. Conservation status. Significant deficiencies in the data sources that inform these decisions are well-recognised. The IUCN Red List evaluates "Fregetta grallaria" as being of least concern based on range size, population trend, and population size criteria. In New Zealand, its conservation status is nationally endangered
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Chinese monal [SEP] IUCN conservation status
and the green and Indian peafowls). Males measure in length while females measure . The mean weight is reportedly . The scientific name, "lhuysii", commemorates the French statesman Édouard Drouyn de Lhuys. Due to ongoing habitat loss and degradation, limited range and illegal hunting, the Chinese monal is evaluated as vulnerable on IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. It is listed on Appendix I of CITES. In captivity. London Zoo and Beijing Zoo have kept Chinese monal but all attempts to establish a captive
rapid decreasing of population, the Chinese government has given this species the utmost conservation status of "National First Grade Key Protected Wild Animal" to ensure its survival. Global conservation agencies and charities, such as the World Wildlife Fund and IUCN, have been collaborating with the Chinese government to ensure the survival of the species. Distribution. There are two subspecies of narrow-ridged finless porpoise, the Yangtze and the East Asian finless porpoises, the former inhabiting the Yangtze River, and the latter the coastal areas off mainland
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Cochlearia tatrae [SEP] IUCN conservation status
in the Morskie Oko Lake area of the High Tatra Mountains, at in elevation. The population is estimated at 600 individuals. In Slovakia the populations are found in thirty sites, at elevations up to . It is found on Mięguszowiecki Szczyt Mountain (Slovak: "Veľký Mengusovský štít"), which is on the Slovak-Polish border. "Cochlearia tatrae" is an IUCN Red List vulnerable species. See also. - Tatra National Park, Poland - Tatra National Park, Slovakia
Cochlearia tatrae Cochlearia tatrae or Tatra scurvy-grass is a flowering plant of the genus "Cochlearia" in the family Brassicaceae. The plant is endemic to and named after the Tatra Mountains, which in northern Slovakia and southern Poland. The plant blooms from April to September. Distribution. The species is a subnival (upper alpine dwarf scrub) and alpine plant. It is found in moist rock scree and crevices, and around springs and streams. In Poland the plant is restricted to a dozen sites
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Dice's cottontail [SEP] IUCN conservation status
It also occurs in the oak-dominated cloud forests and high elevation shrublands at an altitude of up to in Cerro Chirripó. Status. The IUCN lists Dice's cottontail in its Red Book of Endangered Species as "Data Deficient" as the species has been little studied and its population trend is unknown, but in 1996, it was listed as "Endangered". The IUCN has identified a number of threats that it may face. Coyotes have become established in the area and may prey on it, and other
Tapeti The tapeti ("Sylvilagus brasiliensis"), also known as the Brazilian cottontail or forest cottontail, is a cottontail rabbit species. Its range extends from southern Mexico to northern Argentina. It is small to medium-sized with a small, dark tail, short hind feet, and short ears. The tapeti's conservation status is classified as "Least Concern" by the IUCN. Taxonomy. The species was first described scientifically by Carl Linnaeus in the 10th edition of Systema Naturae, published in 1753.
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Eugenia singampattiana [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Eugenia singampattiana Eugenia singampattiana is a critically endangered species of plant in the family Myrtaceae. It is endemic to the hills around Singampatti and Papanasam in the state of Tamil Nadu in India.
the Small Entrepreneur Programme – SEP– and uplifted the lives of countless plantation workers. These are only a few of over 100 projects the MJF Foundation implements each year. Sustainability. In 2007, Fernando extended his commitment to human service by establishing Dilmah Conservation www.dilmahconservation.org which focuses on working towards a more sustainable use of the environment in partnership with IUCN, the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The Dilmah Conservation initiative aims to foster respect for the environment and ensure its protection by encouraging a harmonious co-existence of man
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Garrido's hutia [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Garrido's hutia Garrido's hutia ("Mysateles garridoi") is a critically endangered or possibly extinct species that is found in the Greater Antillean moist forests Global 200 ecoregion. Its previous range is thought to have included small islands in the Banco de los Jardins y Jardinillos of Canarreos Archipelago south of Cuba's Zapata Peninsula and east of the Isle of Youth. A single animal was collected around 1970 on Cayos Maja off of south-central Cuba. In 1989, two additional animals were captured alive in keys near Cayos Maja
(Archipélago de Sabana hutia) - "Capromys pilorides" (Desmarest's hutia) - Genus "Mesocapromys" - "Mesocapromys angelcabrerai" (Cabrera's hutia) - "Mesocapromys auritus" (eared hutia) - "Mesocapromys melanurus" (black-tailed hutia) - "Mesocapromys nanus" (dwarf hutia) - "Mesocapromys sanfelipensis" (San Felipe hutia) - Genus "Mysateles" - "Mysateles garridoi" (Garrido's hutia) - "Mysateles gundlachi"
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Graphium stresemanni [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Graphium stresemanni Graphium stresemanni is a vulnerable species of butterfly in the family Papilionidae. It is endemic to the Indonesian island of Seram. It closely resembles the related "Graphium weiskei", a more common species from New Guinea but has been treated as a distinct species. It is rare. Taxonomy. "Graphium batjanensis" described by Okano in 1984 appears to be allopatric to "G. stresemanni" and the same species.It has also been suggested to be conspecific with "G. weiskei". References.
- Gimenez Dixon, M. 1996. Graphium stresemanni. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 31 July 2007. - Müller, C.J. and Tennent, W.J 1999 A New Species of Graphium Scopoli (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae) from the Bismarck Archipelago, Papua New Guinea 1999 "Records of the Australian Museum" 51: (161-168) pdf Presents a key to the closely related "Graphium kosii" , "Graphium weiskei" (Ribbe), "G.stresemanni" (Rothschild), "
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Paulownia kawakamii [SEP] IUCN conservation status
Paulownia kawakamii Paulownia kawakamii, commonly known as the sapphire dragon tree, is a tree species in the Paulowniaceae family. The tree is native to Taiwan, eastern China, and Japan. It is deciduous and bears many large violet flowers in early spring before the leaves appear. "Paulownia kawakamii" is an IUCN Red List critically endangered plant species, that is threatened by habitat loss from habitat destruction in its native range. Cultivation. "Paulownia kawakamii" is cultivated by plant nurseries, for use as
- "Paulownia elongata" - "Paulownia fargesii" - "Paulownia fortunei" — dragon tree. - "Paulownia glabrata" - "Paulownia grandifolia" - "Paulownia imperialis" - "Paulownia kawakamii" - "Paulownia lilacina" - "Paulownia longifolia" - "Paulownia meridionalis" - "Paulownia mikado" - "Paulownia recurva" - "Paulownia rehderiana" - "Paulownia shensiensis" - "Paulownia silvestrii" - "Paulownia taiwaniana"
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Peltophryne fluviatica [SEP] IUCN conservation status
or blotches and a light tan—yellow middorsal hairline. Habitat. "Peltophryne fluviatica" occurs in xeric habitats with broadleaf gallery forest, usually close to streams. Males call from shallow running water. Eggs are deposited in still water. Conservation. "Peltophryne fluviatica" is listed as a critically endangered species due to a restricted range and continual habitat loss. The species has not been seen since it was described in 1972 and features on the list of "Lost Frogs". It is uncertain whether it
Peltophryne fluviatica Peltophryne fluviatica, common names Dominican Caribbean toad or Hispaniolan crestless toad, is a species of toad endemic to the Cibao Valley in the northwestern Dominican Republic. It has only been recorded at two localities. Description. Males measure in snout–vent length; females are unknown. Snout is acuminate and tympanum is distinct. Dorsum bears numerous scattered small warts; those in the paratoid areas are more prominent. Dorsal ground color is green, from bright to olive. There are often bright yellow—orange spots
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