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STUART PIMM


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'Lord of the Rings' director backs long shot de-extinction plan, starring New Zealand's lost moa

Read full article: 'Lord of the Rings' director backs long shot de-extinction plan, starring New Zealand's lost moa

Filmmaker Peter Jackson's fascination with a large extinct New Zealand bird has led to an unusual partnership with a biotech company known for its grand and controversial plans to bring back lost species.

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Endangered sea turtle populations show signs of recovery in more than half the world, survey finds

Read full article: Endangered sea turtle populations show signs of recovery in more than half the world, survey finds

A new global survey finds that endangered sea turtles show signs of recovery in a majority of places where theyโ€™re found worldwide.

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A North Carolina wildlife crossing will save people. Can it save the last wild red wolves too?

Read full article: A North Carolina wildlife crossing will save people. Can it save the last wild red wolves too?

Red wolves once ranged far and wide across the U_S_, helping them earn the nickname โ€œAmerica's wolf.โ€.

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Many animals and plants are losing their genetic diversity, making them more vulnerable

Read full article: Many animals and plants are losing their genetic diversity, making them more vulnerable

Two-thirds of animal and plant populations are declining in genetic diversity, which makes it harder to adapt to environmental changes.

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New research shows a quarter of freshwater animals are threatened with extinction

Read full article: New research shows a quarter of freshwater animals are threatened with extinction

New research shows about a quarter of animals living in rivers, lakes and other freshwater sources are threatened with extinction.

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Nearly half of the worldโ€™s migratory species are in decline, UN report says

Read full article: Nearly half of the worldโ€™s migratory species are in decline, UN report says

A new United Nations report says nearly half of the world's migratory species are in decline.

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Beloved monarch butterflies now listed as endangered

Read full article: Beloved monarch butterflies now listed as endangered

Monarch butterflies are now listed as endangered because of fast dwindling populations in North America.

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Beloved monarch butterflies now listed as endangered

Read full article: Beloved monarch butterflies now listed as endangered

Monarch butterflies are now listed as endangered because of fast dwindling populations in North America.

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One-fifth of reptiles worldwide face risk of extinction

Read full article: One-fifth of reptiles worldwide face risk of extinction

A comprehensive new assessment of thousands of reptiles species has found that 21% are considered endangered, critically endangered or vulnerable to extinction.

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World isn't meeting biodiversity goals, UN report finds

Read full article: World isn't meeting biodiversity goals, UN report finds

In 2010, more than 150 countries agreed to goals to protect nature, but the new United Nations scorecard found that the world has largely failed to meet 20 different targets to safeguard species and ecosystems. Reducing "everything on the planet to single scoresโ€ obscures the fact that the picture may look different in different places, he said. But Mrema and lead author David Cooper said the world should think about a different poster animal: humans. One of the challenges in meeting global biodiversity targets is a mismatch between countries with abundant natural assets โ€” such as large tracts of intact tropical forests โ€” and those with money to enforce protections. Dalhousie University marine biologist Boris Worm, who also wasnโ€™t part of the report, said the world is at a crossroads.

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Not easy eating green: Herbivores most at extinction risk

Read full article: Not easy eating green: Herbivores most at extinction risk

Although scientists have long focused on the worlds predators, a massive new study finds that herbivores, critters that eat plants, are the animals most at risk of extinction. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)Although scientists often worry most about the loss of the worlds predators, a comprehensive new study finds that plant-eating herbivores are the animals most at risk of extinction. Scientists even examined the presumed diets of more than 2,000 species no longer alive and found that herbivores again had the highest extinction proportion. Extinction causes invasive species, climate change and habitat loss hit herbivores harder than animals with other diets, Atwood said. Size may be part of the reason herbivores are more at risk, the ecologist said.

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