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Washington University in St. Louis News & Information > WUSTL in the News >


WUSTL in the News Spotlight


(Excerpted from Kansas City Star, Tuesday, July 4, 2006)

Bird extinction pace worries scientists

Birds are becoming extinct faster than scientists have thought.

Conservationists now estimate that a species of birds vanishes every year. Previously, they believed the rate to be one species every four years.

And new research predicts that rate could leap to 10 species a year - an increase that could wipe out 12 percent of the nearly 10,000 known bird species by the end of this century...

A group of scientists that included conservationist Peter Raven, president of the Missouri Botanical Garden, revised the existing extinction estimate to take into account ongoing fossil discoveries of extinct species and missing birds not yet classified as extinct. The results of their study appear this week in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

In Missouri and Southern Illinois, where birdwatchers flock during May's peak in bird migration, the cerulean warbler is listed among the state's 50 birds denoted as a "species of concern" by the Missouri Department of Conservation.

"Cerulean warblers have a very specific habitat," said Linda Tossing, field studies researcher at the World Bird Sanctuary in Valley Park and vice president of conservation at the St. Louis chapter of the Audubon Society. "They like tall trees near rivers."

Levee building on the Missouri and Mississippi rivers has damaged the habitat of this songbird, Tossing said. The warbler is named for the male's sky-blue coloring.

Raven said that habitat destruction, global warming and selective gathering of plants for food and medicine warming contribute to extinction.

Since 1975, 20 species have gone extinct in the wild. But, the good news is that conservation efforts work, Raven said. "There would have been 25 more species gone extinct without the conservation efforts over the past 30 years," he said.

"We depend entirely on other organisms for our continued life on Earth. We're losing the sustainability of Earth," said Raven, who is also the George Englemann professor of botany at Washington University. "It's in all our art, our history, our legends. If you're spiritual, you can ask: Do we have the right to kill off living things?"

Raven and his fellow researchers say that bird extinction is a poor model for predicting extinction of other organisms, because birds receive special protection out of people's fondness for them.




Appeared in:

Click headline below to view news story as originally posted on an external Web site.

•   Bird extinction pace worries scientists

Kansas City Star, Tuesday, July 4, 2006
Byline: Molly McElroy, St. Louis Post-Dispatch


Story also ran in 19 others:  Knight Ridder Tribune News Service, Edmonton Journal (Canada), St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Monterey County Herald (CA), Bradenton Herald (FL), San Luis Obispo Tribune (CA), Kentucky.com, Columbus Ledger-Enquirer (GA), Grand Forks Herald (ND), Centre Daily Times (PA), Biloxi Sun Herald (MS), Belleville News-Democrat (IL), Contra Costa Times (CA), Myrtle Beach Sun News (SC), The State (SC), Macon Telegraph (GA), Charlotte Observer (NC), Duluth News Tribune (MN) and Chattanooga Times Free Press (TV)
(Note: Links do not imply an endorsement; some sites require registration; links may change or become broken over time.)


Related Information
Media Assistance:

Tony Fitzpatrick
Senior Science Editor
tony_fitzpatrick@wustl.edu

(314) 935-5272
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Revised:

Wednesday, Dec. 6, 2006


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