Australian Painted-snipe
Rostratula australis
Conservation Attention: Medium
This Australian endemic bird occurs widely but unevenly across the continent.
Conservation Attention: Medium
This Australian endemic bird occurs widely but unevenly across the continent.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
The Critically Endangered Ayacucho Andes frog is endemic to Peru, where it inhabits montane cloud forests.
Conservation Attention: Low
The highly distinctive aye-aye is the world’s largest nocturnal primate.
Conservation Attention: Low
The baiji is probably the most threatened marine mammal in the world; with some saying that it is ‘functionally extinct’.
Conservation Attention: Medium
Baird’s tapir is the largest indigenous mammal in Central America. Tapirs are a ‘primitive’ group that resemble the ancestor of rhinos and horses, and have remained morphologically similar for the last 35 million years.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
This once numerous species has only been sighted three times since 1986, and has not been found at the place it was originally found, despite repeated surveys.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
When threatened, this Critically Endangered frog inflates its body with air and stands raised on outstretched limbs to appear larger.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
This Critically Endangered frog is one of around 15 species collectively known as “egg frogs”, and can be found in the Bamenda Highlands of western Cameroon.
Conservation Attention: Low
Despite the large size of the Banded Ground-cuckoo, this species is inconspicuous and not easy to observe.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
The Banded Toed Gecko is a Moroccan endemic and has a fragmented distribution between the Atlas and Rif Mountains.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
This bird is brightly-coloured, but highly secretive.
Conservation Attention: Medium
The Barbados Leaf-toed gecko has very high predation rates, with a study in 2015 finding 94% of individuals were in a stage of tail regeneration!
Conservation Attention: Very Low
Barrio’s frogs are powerful and fast moving, often jumping to the middle of a stream and seeking shelter under submerged stones or along the stream bank if threatened.
Conservation Attention: Good
The basking shark is the second biggest fish in the sea, after the whale shark. It is the only extant species in the family Cetorhinidae. As an enormous filter feeding species it can be encountered swimming slowly or “basking” near the surface whilst ram-feeding on plankton in cold, coastal waters.
Conservation Attention: Good
In 1985 the adult male population of Baw Baw frogs was estimated to be over ten thousand individuals.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
The Be’er Sheva Fringe-fingered Lizard has had a major population decline in the past few years with more than an 80% decrease in three generations.
Conservation Attention: Low
All individuals of the beautiful nursery frog are found in one location, Thornton Peak in Queensland, Australia, above 1,100 metres above sea level.
Conservation Attention: Very Low
Beck’s Petrel was only definitely known from two specimens taken in 1928 and 1929, until its rediscovery in 2007.
Conservation Attention: Good
Bell’s sawshelled turtle, also known as Bell’s snapping turtle, is one of four species of the genus Myuchelys which split from all other reptiles almost 30 million years ago.
Conservation Attention: Medium
This otherwise reclusive bird is best known for its elaborate courtship display, where the male’s black and white plumage is shown off to good effect in short arching display flights, as well as choreographed strutting – with fluffed up neck feathers and a head pumping action, to attract females.
Conservation Attention: Low
The Bengal slow loris was only recently recognised as a distinct species having been previously classed as a sub species of Nycticebus coucang.
Conservation Attention: Low
The big-headed Amazon River turtle is known locally as the “Cabezón”, which means ‘big-headed’ or ‘stubborn’. This species is one of the most understudied species of turtle in South America, despite being an important food resource for people living in Amazonia.
Conservation Attention: Low
As its name suggests, the big-headed turtle has a disproportionately large head compared to its small body. Its head is so large, in fact, that it cannot be retracted into its shell!
Conservation Attention: Good
Distinguishable from the two other species of thresher sharks, the pelagic and the common thresher, by its namesake – a pair of extremely large eyes used to detect prey in low light.
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>