An update for the IUCN Red List was released today. These are things I immediately noticed that may be of interest:
Among mammals:
Among cartilaginous fishes:
Among mammals:
- Cuvier's hutia has been moved from Endangered to Least Concern
- Iberian lynx has been moved from Endangered to Vulnerable
- Other mammals (other hutias, the Gould's mouse, all three orangutans, the three large African cats, Mexican agouti and crowned guenon) have all been assessed, but their statuses have not changed
- The Gran Canaria giant lizard has moved from Least Concern to Critically Endangered
- The Ibiza wall lizard has moved from Near Threatened to Endangered
- The asp viper has moved from Least Concern to Vulnerable
- The Hermann's tortoise has moved from Near Threatened to Vulnerable
- The El Hierro giant lizard has moved from Critically Endangered to Vulnerable
- The Lilford's wall lizard has moved from Endangered to Near Threatened
- The ocellated lizard and four-lined snake have both moved from Near Threatened to Least Concern
- The rinkhals has been split into two species - the Southern rinkhals,
Hemachatus haemachatus, is Least Concern, while the Nyanga rinkhals, H. nyangensis, is Critically Endangered, possibly extinct
Among cartilaginous fishes:
- The ornate eagle ray has moved from Endangered to Critically Endangered
- The ocellated eagle ray has moved from Vulnerable to Endangered
- The leopard whipray, Himantura leoparda, mangrove whipray, Urogymnus granulatus, and Jenkin's whipray, Pateobatis jenkinsii, have all moved from Vulnerable to Endangered
- The smalltooth sand tiger shark has moved from Vulnerable to Endangered
- A popular aquarium fish, the Endler's livebearer, Poecilia wingei, has been assessed for the first time and listed as Endangered
- Two species of piranha have been assessed as threatened, both endemic to small areas in Venezuela - the Endangered Caribbean piranha, Serrasalmus neveriensis, and the Critically Endangered painted Caribbean piranha, Serrasalmus nalseni
- The South Georgia icefish, Pseudochaenichthys georgianus, has been assessed for the first time and listed as Endangered.
- Several European dung beetles and European glow-worms and fireflies have been assessed; the European glow-worm is now listed as Near Threatened
- A hundred species of Central American bee have now been assessed
- A small handful of more butterflies, crickets and crabs have been assessed, as has the Gila mayfly of New Mexico, now listed as Endangered
- A total of 183 species of Southern African arachnid, mainly spiders but also three species of Ascension Island pseudoscorpions, have been assessed