Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

WWF Says Global Wildlife Populations Declined 60 Per Cent, Demands Action

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Oct, 2018 12:54 PM
    TORONTO — Canadian wildlife are not exempt from a "global biodiversity crisis" that is devastating worldwide animal populations, according to a stark new report by the World Wildlife Fund.
     
     
    The group says in its its 2018 Living Planet Report that global wildlife populations have fallen by 60 per cent in the last four decades.
     
     
    In Canada, mammal populations dropped by 43 per cent, amphibian and reptile populations dropped by 34 per cent, fish populations dropped by 20 per cent, and some types of birds have lost between 43 and 69 per cent of their populations.
     
     
    "Our constantly increasing demands on nature are driving wildlife to extinction. It's not just elephants, freshwater dolphins and rhinos, but Canadian wildlife too," Megan Leslie, WWF-Canada president and CEO, said in a release. 
     
     
    "Caribou, southern resident killer whales, burrowing owls — these Canadian species have been pushed to the brink by human impacts on nature."
     
     
    The WWF is asking the government to make a number of changes to curb the further loss of Canadian species.
     
     
    These changes include creating new networks of protected areas for both terrestrial and inland waters, and marine protected areas. The organization would also like to see Ottawa phase out fossil fuel subsidies and use that funding to support habitat-friendly renewable energy development.
     
     
    It has asked that the Impact Assessment Act be updated to ensure development decisions are made based on climate and biodiversity impacts.
     
     
    Leslie also said Canada has committed to new land protections the size of Alberta by 2020, and if it's done right, the country could make "meaningful progress" on protecting Canadian wildlife.
     
     
    "But if we squander this opportunity, we will condemn many more species to population loss and even extinction," she cautioned.
     
     
    Internationally, the organization found that wildlife population declines are especially significant in the tropics, with an 89 per cent loss reported in South and Central America and the Caribbean since 1970.
     
     
    The WWF attributed the global drop in animal populations to habitat loss, due to agriculture and over-exploitation of species.
     
     
    "Only one-quarter of land on Earth is free from impacts of human activities and that number is projected to decline to just one-tenth by 2050," the organization said.
     
     
    As well, a Living Planet Freshwater Index showed an 83 per cent decline in freshwater species since 1970.
     
     
    The report used indicators from the Living Planet Index, the Species Habitat Index, the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List Index and the Biodiversity Intactness Index.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    PICS: Surrey RCMP And Partners Recognized At Business Awards Gala

    PICS: Surrey RCMP And Partners Recognized At Business Awards Gala
    On October 4th, 2018, eight winners were celebrated at the Surrey Board of Trade’s 22nd Annual Surrey Police Officer of the Year Awards Dinner.

    PICS: Surrey RCMP And Partners Recognized At Business Awards Gala

    Marijuana Roll Out Will Be Challenging, New Territory For Everyone: John Horgan

    B.C. Premier John Horgan says the government will do its best to protect children and public safety while making sure demand is met when marijuana becomes legal later this month.

    Marijuana Roll Out Will Be Challenging, New Territory For Everyone: John Horgan

    Homicide Detectives Identify Woman Found Dead In Richmond As 19-Year-Old Aspen Pallot

    Homicide investigators on the Lower Mainland responded to their third case in less than 24 hours Thursday as they were called to a fatal shooting in B.C.'s Fraser Valley.

    Homicide Detectives Identify Woman Found Dead In Richmond As 19-Year-Old Aspen Pallot

    Body Of 19-Year-Old Woman Found In Richmond, B.C., Home, Man In Custody

    British Columbia's Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says the body of a 19-year-old woman was found early Thursday in a home in Richmond, B.C.

    Body Of 19-Year-Old Woman Found In Richmond, B.C., Home, Man In Custody

    28-Yr-Old Man Accused Of Exposing Himself To More Than 60 Girls, Young Women Across Vancouver

    28-Yr-Old Man Accused Of Exposing Himself To More Than 60 Girls, Young Women Across Vancouver
      Kurjata is accused of committing an indecent act in public, exposing genitals to a minor. This map of indecent acts shows that allegedly took place in Vancouver between July 6 and 18, 2018 

    28-Yr-Old Man Accused Of Exposing Himself To More Than 60 Girls, Young Women Across Vancouver

    'Insensitive And Disrespectful:' Mass Killer Matthew de Grood's Review Angers Victim's Father

    'Insensitive And Disrespectful:' Mass Killer Matthew de Grood's Review Angers Victim's Father
    CALGARY — The father of one of five young people stabbed to death at a Calgary house party in 2014 says the mental health board overseeing the killer's treatment has been insensitive and disrespectful to the victims' families.

    'Insensitive And Disrespectful:' Mass Killer Matthew de Grood's Review Angers Victim's Father