I am not going to pick a side, but I find that generally optimism helps a lot when discussing stuff like this, because you get more hope and so you aren't as down in the dumps and you also don't feel like your goals are impossible to reach.
Hainan gibbon: only 25 or so left
Rabb's fringe-lipped tree frog: 1 left!![]()
Athough there are only 4 (or another really small number) now, if conservation allowes it, the whole species could come back.
For example- Bison in wild: Only had 22 and 300 in total individuals
Mauritius Kestrel- Only 4 individuals and 1 breeding pair and now they have gone from extinct to endangered.
Pere david deer, mongolian wild horse, Panamanian golden frog, etc... Are all conservation success stories where it seemed hopeless until people decided that they wanted to save this species.
So never say a species is completely hopeless.(Unless of course the remaining individuals are all one sex...)
Do people think that Northern White Rhinos will be saved by cloning or is it a losses cause? (Just wanting opinions)
there's lots of info on the internet about the Mauritius kestrel recovery. This article is concise and has references at the bottom: Mauritius kestrel: A conservation success story - Scientific American Blog NetworkHow can be that possibe, for Mauritius kestrel, for population to expand from just only 6 individuals, are you shure that they were 6? What about inbreeding?
Yes there were definitely 6.
There was some inbreeding symptoms in captive birds but not too harmful in that they all died or anything like that.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauritius_kestrel
there's lots of info on the internet about the Mauritius kestrel recovery. This article is concise and has references at the bottom: Mauritius kestrel: A conservation success story - Scientific American Blog Network
Island species tend to be very resilient against inbreeding, probably because they descend from small populations originally and deleterious genes have long ago been weeded out. There are many examples of insular species rebounding from lows of just a few individuals with no apparent bad effects.
South China tiger (which may or may not be a valid subspecies) exists only in captivity for quite some time and I see no reason why the captive population would die out. As you may or may not know there is a recent rewilding and breeding compound set up in South Africa (though this is not without controversy).
yes, for smaller oceanic islands. Other examples besides the aforementioned Mauritius kestrel include the Mauritius echo parakeet (c.580 birds today from only c.10 birds in the 1980s), Mauritius pink pigeon (c.395 birds today from c.20 birds in the 1970s), Seychelles magpie-robin (c.200 birds today from 12-15 birds in 1965), Chatham Island black robin (c.200 birds today, all from one pair in the 1980s), Laysan duck (over 600 today, from 12 birds in 1912). It wouldn't be difficult to find more examples.That is to wonderfull information, I've never heard of. Great. But that's probably case for animal species from very smaller islands, not like Sumatra, is that can count for islands mamalls, for example for Javan rhinoceros?
no, there are more than 22. I wondered where you got that number from - I figure Wikipedia where it says "The most recent count found 22 Hainan gibbons split between two families, one of 11 and one of seven members, with four loners, all residing in Bawangling National Nature Reserve on Hainan Island", but that line (repeated endlessly on other sites) lacks a reference or footnote and actually comes from 2010 research. There are probably between 26 and 28 individuals currently on Hainan (see BBC - Earth - World's rarest ape is teetering on the edge of extinction).Only 22 gibbons left now
do you have some sort of reference for that, or more information at all? There are 40-odd species of Oahu tree snail.Oahu tree snail only one left
do you have some sort of reference for that, or more information at all? There are 40-odd species of Oahu tree snail.
thanks for that. That does seem to be the case, although it is a poorly-written article (e.g. the snails are hermaphroditic, so the animal isn't a "he") and there is precious little information about the species otherwise.I'd imagine they are referring to Achatinella apexfulva, which has been reduced to a single male individual kept at the University of Hawaii. An article on the animal can be found here: The last snail: conservation and extinction in Hawai?i | Thom van Dooren
thanks for that. That does seem to be the case, although it is a poorly-written article (e.g. the snails are hermaphroditic, so the animal isn't a "he") and there is precious little information about the species otherwise.
That would be Partula turgida, which was doing reasonably well at London Zoo until a protozoan disease got into the colony of 296 individuals, and killed every single one over the course of 21 months. The last one died on January 1st 1996.
As quite a lot of the extant species have populations rather lower than this, and no one is sure whether they are equally vulnerable to said protozoan infection, it may not be the last species to end thus - although since the demise of the turgida snail biosecurity precautions have been increased rather a lot!