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This ad campaign has haunted us, in a way. It’s imagery so powerful and memorable, that we had to revisit it.Β 

A gorgeous and powerful campaign for environmental group Robin Wood features brilliantly rendered scenes of habitat destruction, superimposed in the form of the creatures they’re hurting. Β The agencyΒ Grabarz & PartnerΒ created the posters using painstakingly rendered 3D forms, and adding in details like oil rigs, fires, and industrial machinery. Their tagline: Destroying nature is destroying life. The result is a painfully effective look at what happens to the natural world when humans act with indifference and greed toward nature. Beautiful and sad work,Β Via Behance:

Extinct is forever.Β 

That’s the obvious takeaway from today’s announcement from the US Department of Fish and Wildlife, which announced 22 new species that are officially extinct, never to be seen alive again.

Among the most prominent is the Ivory-billed woodpecker, a large and charismatic bird, that people claimed to still spot in the marshlands of Arkansas and Louisiana. It’s now officially gone for good.

The list may seem obscure and insignificant to the casual observer, with a number of species of birds and mollusks that aren’t easily recognizable. Β But the pace and volume of extinct and endangered species is so great, it’s impossible to not be concerned. The more diversity the earth loses, the more strain gets put on the entire ecosystem.

Below are some images of the animals that were named to the recent extinction list, which has a 30 day comment period.

Via The AP and NY Times:

“Around the globe, some 902 species have been documented as extinct. The actual number is thought to be much higher because some are never formally identified, and many scientists warn the earth is in an β€œextinction crisis” with flora and fauna now disappearing at 1,000 times the historical rate.”

Β  Β – AP

The San Marcos gambusia joins the list of extinct species.
A number of mollusk species also joins the list of official extinctions
The Maui nukupuΚ»u has not been documented since 1996. This preserved specimen was collected a century earlier.

Ivory-billed woodpeckers filmed in Louisiana in 1935, when the birds were already rare. Despite pleas from conservationists and wildlife officials, the area was later logged by the Chicago Mill and Lumber Company.

A Kauai O’o filmed some time in the 1970s or ’80s.

Justin-Mott-Fatu-and-Naji-Final-Story-010

This tragic case of humans vs. the natural world involves the critically endangered Northern White Rhino, of which two remain, in the entire world. You read that right. One, two. And since they are both females, the species is set to go extinct in the next few years. For the time being, however, these two beautiful females are being guarded around the clock in Kenya.

Photojournalist Justin MottΒ has a powerful series that shows the love that the wildlife guards have for their rhinos friends. We see these gentle giants being touched and leaned upon, and sense the tragedy in their eyes.

Justin-Mott-Fatu-and-Naji-Final-Story-011

Fatu and Najin are the names of the final two females, and they’re being kept at the Ol Peteja Conservancy. The last male, Sudan, died a few years back, and the species are notoriously difficult to breed, meaning there’s no hope to keep the Northern White Rhino alive.

My Modern Met has an in-depth interview with Mott, about his photography, and the power of capturing these amazing animals before they’re gone for good. Β We’re left pretty much speechless in cases like this. Please share articles like this to help spread awareness of just how fragile our natural world is, and how much it needs our help and protection.

Justin-Mott-Fatu-and-Naji-Final-Story-018Justin-Mott-Fatu-and-Naji-Final-Story-019

Via My Modern Met:

How long did you spend with the rhinos and caretakers, and what surprised you most about their bond?

I was there for one week. I started my days just before sunrise and would hang around until into the evening as the rhinos went to sleep. I spent most of my time with the caretakers, but I also went on patrol with the armed guards into the bush.

For the caretakers, I was so impressed with their love for the rhinos and how they can just walk right up to them and scratch them behind the ears. Peter, one of the caretakers, told me as he pet Fatu behind her ear and then her hind leg, β€œit calms her.”

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We’re sadly entering a new age of animal extinction, this one part of the epoch called the Anthropocene, which is primarily caused by us – humans.

As we grapple with the huge issues of climate change and resource scarcity, we also are starting to lose animal species at an alarming rate.

Researched and designed byΒ BraΔ‡a Burazeri, Duck Knees, and NeoMam Studios, this beautiful illustrated collection shows which species is most endangered in each of the USA’s 50 states. It’s an exhaustive and also tragic list, with animals ranging from the smallest mouse, to the biggest whale. Each lovingly illustrated animal is accompanied by an informative blurb about their habitat, and their remaining numbers. Via Behance:

Endangered Animals Moss and Fog

dream1

In a painful yet beautiful animated short, we see four animals singing the famousΒ β€˜I Dreamed a Dream’ song from Les MisΓ©rables, as their very existences are threatened by manmade disasters, and violent poaching and hunting. Β Created for the Wildlife Conservation Film Festival in 2016, the video has been making the rounds recently, and it’s even more relevant than ever, sadly.

We start by seeing the animals in their natural habitat, followed by the onslaught of poachers and whalers, who kill the animals, as the song grows more and more despairing.

dream2

The award-winning short, Dream, should get everyone’s attention, for its message and its beauty. Created by Zombie Studio, based in SΓ£o Paulo. Β Via MyModernMet:

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Due for extinction: African Elephant
Due for extinction: African Elephant

We all know that climate change is real, is happening, and that we as humans are responsible. What you might not know, however, are the species that are already being severely affected by rising temperatures, melting sea ice, and deforestation and habitat loss. Some of the most iconic animals on our planet are on a course for extinction, in the next few decades. These aren’t strange, unheard of animals. These are some of the big, obvious, gorgeous creatures that we learn about as children, and have been a beautiful part of our planet for millennia.

Does this list make you sick to your stomach? Does it bother you that your children or grandchildren may never know some of these beautiful, intelligent, special animals? Β It surely should. We know the stakes, we know the culprits, we knowΒ how to clean up our planet and protect the habitats that wild animals depend on. It’s a question of willpower, of bravery, and of heart. Which side of history do you want to be on?

amur leopard moss and fog
Due for Extinction: Amur Leopard
panda moss and fog
Due for Extinction: Panda

Thanks to the World Wildlife Foundation for their photographs, and the great work they’re doing to bring attention to these species, and what efforts are being done to protect them. Hint- they need your help.

orangutan moss and fog
Due for Extinction: Orangutan
polar bear moss and fog
Due for Extinction: Polar Bear
rhino moss and fog
Due for Extinction: Rhino
tiger moss and fog
Due for Extinction: Tiger
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The issue of animal extinction has always been one that has interested me, and in recent years, terrified me. Β Those that left earth during the ice ages is one thing. Human-pressured extinction is another. By some accounts, humans have already driven over a thousand species of animals into oblivion, with some of the most well known ones being the dodo and passenger pigeon. I was fortunate enough to spend a week in the Amazon jungle a few years back, and saw glimpses of the endangered pink river dolphin, a freshwater dolphin sure to go extinct in the next ten to fifteen years, due to human encroachment on its habitat. Β These days, scientists are doing amazing things, like bringing extinct frog embryos momentarily back to life, and there’s talk of woolly mammoths returning to existence, thanks to cloning. Wired has a fascinating look at extinct species they wish science would bring back to life. What’s your take?
Smilodon vs. Canis Dirus

Via Wired: “The permanence of extinction may soon go the way of the dodo. The idea of bringing species back from the dead is gaining traction as scientific advances bring it closer to the realm of possibility. Today scientists are meeting in Washington, D.C. to discuss how they might really be able toΒ resurrect animals like the passenger pigeonΒ or the woolly mammoth.”

Image: Saber-tooth tiger battles dire wolves for a mammoth carcass in the La Brea tar pits. Robert Bruce Horsfall, 1913. (Public domain/Wikimedia commons)

Giant Ground Sloth

Giant Ground Sloth

MegatheriumΒ was as big as an elephant, measuring as much as 20 feet from head to tail. Only mammoths and Paraceratherium were bigger. Its claws were so big it had to walk on the sides of its feet to accommodate them. And it could stand up and walk on two feet like you do.

MegatheriumΒ lived in North and South America, hanging on until around 10,000 years ago. They are impressive specimens in many museum collections, and you might even be able toΒ buy your own giant fossil sloth. We’d rather see the living, breathing version.

Images: Top: Megatherium americanum. Robert Bruce Horsfall, 1913. (Wikimedia commons). Right:Wikimedia commons.

Haast's Eagle and Moa

Haast’s Eagle and Moa

As long as we’re resurrecting animals, why not ecosystems? We could reconstruct at least part of one ancient food chain by bringing back the famous flightless bird of New Zealand, the moa. These enormous avians — some of which stretched more than 3.5 m from toe to beak — were the dominant herbivores in the land down under the land down under until the Maori hunted them to extinction around 1400 A.D.

Before the arrival of man, though, moas feared another predator: the incredible Haast’s Eagle. The largest known raptor to have ever lived, Haast’s Eagles would soar with their 3-m wingspans and then dive down on poor moas at speeds up to 80 km/hr. The predatory birds went extinct when their major food source — moas — was obliterated.

Image:Β John Megahan/PLoS Biology

Diprotodon

Diprotodon

Nobody knows whatΒ DiprotodonΒ looked like. But we’re pretty sure it was strange. The largest marsupial that ever lived, it is sometimes referred to as a giant wombat. They grew to be as big as a hippo, measuring up to 10-feet long and weighing more than 3 tons.

There really isn’t anything remotely like this creature around today, which is why we’d like to bring it back. That’s the only way we’ll ever know what this odd beast looked like.

Image: One of theΒ many interpretationsΒ of what Diprotodon might have looked like. (Wikimedia commons)

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Dodo

No animal may be more iconic than the dodo when it comes to extinction. These fat, flightless birds lived what we can only presume was a peaceful life on the island of Mauritius. When explorers arrived, they hunted the birds down and unleashed invasive species that killed or competed with the dodos. The last one was seen in the wild in 1662. If any species deserves to be brought back from extinction, it’s probably this one.

Image:Β Cornelis Saftleven

Paraceratherium

Paraceratherium

A lot of the animals we find ourselves wishing for are bigger versions of something similar that is still living. Some are just big.Β ParaceratheriumΒ is probably the biggest land mammal that ever lived. So obviously we want to see some of those, walking around, dwarfing elephants (and also the mammoths we also brought back).

We strayed into the millions of years ago territory we said we’d avoid to include this one, but come on.Β These crazy looking things were around 16 feet tall at the shoulder! They were almost 30 feet long and probably weighed 18 tons. Whoa.

Images: Top:Β Wikimedia commons. Right:Β Wikimedia commons.

Smilodon

Smilodon

Possible homicidal psycho jungle kitties, members of the genus Smilodon would not make great candidates for de-extinction. Unless, of course, you could make them in pint-size versions. Imagine a cute little saber-toothed beast of death tromping around your living room, walking all over your keyboard, leaving enormous tooth marks on your couch. Cute and terrifying at the same time.

Smilodons used to roam the plains (not jungles) of North and South America, attacking ancient ground sloths, bison, and camels. No one is exactly sure why their teeth are so big, though some scientists suggest they were used to signal sexual prowess to females. Smilodons went extinct about 10,000 years ago.

Image:Β Charles R. Knight

Megacerops

Megacerops

Imagine the great cracking sound that must have thundered across North Americas plains when Megacerops males fought in head-to-head combat. These rhino-like creatures have awesome Y-shaped horns with blunt ends perfect for smashing into a rival that’s eying your female. As grazers, Megacerops herds could be brought back and unleashed on their old grounds.

Image:Β Dmitry Bogdanov/Wikimedia

Tasmanian Tiger

Tasmanian Tiger

Thylacine is an excellent candidate for de-extinction: It only went extinct recently, and it looks like an awesome cross between a wolf, a lion and a numbat.

The species disappeared from mainland Australia a couple thousand years ago, but survived in Tasmania until the 20th century. That population took a big hit when Thylacines were blamed for killing sheep, and the Tasmanian government began paying bounties for dead tigers between 1888 and 1909. The last captive Thylacine died inΒ 1936, likely from neglect, 59 days after it finally received government protection. Subsequent searches for remaining tigers in the wild turned up hundreds of reported sightings, but no solid evidence.

I think we owe this species a big apology. But we’ll need to bring it back before we can.

Image:Β Thylacines at the Beaumaris Zoo in Hobart, 1910. (Wikimedia commons)

Woolly Mammoth

Woolly Mammoth

Woolly Mammoths really should be around today. Isolated pockets of theses creatures lived until historic times, dying out only 4,000 to 6,000 years ago. And we’ve got frozen specimens with preserved soft tissue. Our great-great-great-great-times-500-grandfathers probably hunted these magnificent beasts and certainly loved to draw them on cave walls. As far as extinct charismatic megafauna go, Woolly Mammoths lead the pack.

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