‘Eua Forest Gecko
Lepidodactylus euaensis
Conservation Attention: Very Low
The ‘Eua Forest gecko is an island endemic in Tonga and, despite extensive surveys on other islands, no additional populations of this species have been found.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
The ‘Eua Forest gecko is an island endemic in Tonga and, despite extensive surveys on other islands, no additional populations of this species have been found.
Conservation Attention: Medium
The Abbott’s Booby has a unique breeding biology, behaviour and bone structure that sets it apart from the six other booby species.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
Acanthodactylus harranensis is named after the area where it was discovered; the ruins of the ancient city of Harran in Turkey. It has a total known range of approximately 3.6 km2.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
The African wedgefish is a large species of ray that is now very rare. It is found off the West coast of Africa, but little is known about this species and numbers are thought to have declined dramatically.
Conservation Attention: Medium
The African wild ass is a hardy animal which is well adapted to desert life.
Conservation Attention: Medium
Described by Gerald Durrell as a ‘honey-coloured teddy bear’, the Lake Alaotra gentle lemur is the only species of primate to occur exclusively in marsh habitat.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
Alexteroon Jynx is a species of frog that is endemic to Cameroon.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
The Alsco long-fingered frog is named after the company that funded the expedition that led to its formal discovery: American Linen Supply Company (ALSCO).
Conservation Attention: Very Low
Due to its attractive appearance Alveopora excelsa is often targeted for the aquarium trade across South East Asia.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
Within the genus Alveopora, there are 12 species, most of which, like A. minuta, are poorly documented in terms of their biology and ecology.
Conservation Attention: Low
Parhoplophryne is a monotypic frog genus, meaning that Parhoplophryne usambarica is the sole species in this genus.
Conservation Attention: Good
The Amazon River dolphins are the largest freshwater dolphins in the world!
Conservation Attention: Good
The Amazonian manatee is the smallest member of the manatee family and can be distinguished by its smoother rubbery skin and lack of vestigial nails on its flippers.
Conservation Attention: Good
The Angelshark is a distinctive shark species found in the northeast Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea. It is a “flat shark” (one that is dorsoventrally flattened) and an ambush predator, relying on camouflage to surprise its prey.
Conservation Attention: Medium
Anodonthyla theoi is endemic to Madagascar and is known only from Manombo Species Reserve.
Conservation Attention: Medium
Anodonthyla vallani is a frog endemic to Madagascar and is known only from a single locality within the Ambohitantely Species Reserve.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
Before it was recorded again in 2010, only one individual of the Critically Endangered arboreal splayfoot salamander had been found since the 1980s.
Conservation Attention: Good
Archey’s frog is the world’s most Evolutionarily Distinct and Globally Endangered amphibian species.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
This nocturnal storm-petrel is notoriously difficult to identify due to its all dark plumage, which is hard to pick out in the dark.
Conservation Attention: Medium
This species is at the brink of extinction, with only 10 birds found in the wild in the 1980s.
Conservation Attention: Good
The largest land mammal in Asia, this intelligent, highly social animal lives in small groups led by the dominant female, or ‘matriarch’.
Conservation Attention: Medium
The spectacular Asian narrow-headed softshell turtle may be the world’s largest freshwater turtle, growing to over 1.2 metres in length and weighing up to 254 kilograms!
Conservation Attention: Very Low
Apart from a single record in 1966, this Hispaniola endemic species has not been collected since 1929. Worryingly, a number of older records suggest it may have been relatively common in the early 20th century.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
Attenborough’s long-beaked echidna, also known as Sir David’s Long-beaked Echidna, is the smallest and probably most threatened of the three long-beaked echidna species. Echidnas and platypus are the only mammals to lay eggs.
The data used in this page have been provided from the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Species data is updated on a monthly basis, so very recent updates to the IUCN Red List may not yet be shown here.
IUCN 2019. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2019-3. <www.iucnredlist.org>