Red‐list status and extinction risk of the world's whales, dolphins, and porpoises

Author:

Braulik Gill T.123ORCID,Taylor Barbara L.2ORCID,Minton Gianna234ORCID,Notarbartolo di Sciara Giuseppe235ORCID,Collins Tim236ORCID,Rojas‐Bracho Lorenzo237ORCID,Crespo Enrique A.28ORCID,Ponnampalam Louisa S.29ORCID,Double Michael C.210ORCID,Reeves Randall R.211ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sea Mammal Research Unit Scottish Oceans Institute University of St Andrews St Andrews Fife UK

2. IUCN Species Survival Commission, Cetacean Specialist Group

3. IUCN Marine Mammal Protected Areas Task Force

4. Megaptera Marine Conservation The Hague The Netherlands

5. Tethys Research Institute Milano Italy

6. Global Conservation Wildlife Conservation Society Bronx New York USA

7. Ocean Wise Vancouver British Columbia Canada

8. Laboratorio de Mamíferos Marinos, (CESIMAR, CONICET) Puerto Madryn Argentina

9. The MareCet Research Organization Subang Jaya Selangor Malaysia

10. Australian Antarctic Division Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water Kingston Tasmania Australia

11. Committee of Scientific Advisers Marine Mammal Commission Bethesda Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractTo understand the scope and scale of the loss of biodiversity, tools are required that can be applied in a standardized manner to all species globally, spanning realms from land to the open ocean. We used data from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature Red List to provide a synthesis of the conservation status and extinction risk of cetaceans. One in 4 cetacean species (26% of 92 species) was threatened with extinction (i.e., critically endangered, endangered, or vulnerable) and 11% were near threatened. Ten percent of cetacean species were data deficient, and we predicted that 2–3 of these species may also be threatened. The proportion of threatened cetaceans has increased: 15% in 1991, 19% in 2008, and 26% in 2021. The assessed conservation status of 20% of species has worsened from 2008 to 2021, and only 3 moved into categories of lesser threat. Cetacean species with small geographic ranges were more likely to be listed as threatened than those with large ranges, and those that occur in freshwater (100% of species) and coastal (60% of species) habitats were under the greatest threat. Analysis of odontocete species distributions revealed a global hotspot of threatened small cetaceans in Southeast Asia, in an area encompassing the Coral Triangle and extending through nearshore waters of the Bay of Bengal, northern Australia, and Papua New Guinea and into the coastal waters of China. Improved management of fisheries to limit overfishing and reduce bycatch is urgently needed to avoid extinctions or further declines, especially in coastal areas of Asia, Africa, and South America.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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