The second IUCN Red List update has been uploaded today. These are some of the things I noticed, :
Mammals
Mammals
- The hooded seal has moved from Vulnerable to Endangered.
- The greater glider has moved from Vulnerable to Endangered.
- The bearded and harp seal have both moved from Least Concern to Near Threatened.
- The wild camel has been reassessed from Critically Endangered to Endangered.
- The Hawaiian monk seal has moved from Endangered to Vulnerable.
- The guina has been moved from Vulnerable to Least Concern.
- The jambu fruit-dove has moved from Near Threatened to Vulnerable.
- The saddle-billed stork has moved from Least Concern to Near Threatened.
- The violet turaco has moved from Least Concern to Near Threatened.
- The Alexandrine parakeet has moved from Near Threatened to Least Concern.
- The Philippine duck has moved from Vulnerable to Least Concern.
- These are just 5 out of 1,360 changes, although I do not know enough about most of the species to include them here.
- The black caiman has been reassessed from Conservation Dependent (a defunct status) to Least Concern.
- The green sea turtle has been moved from Vulnerable to Least Concern.
- Plus 192 other reassessments, mostly consisting of Australian and Saharan lizards, or splits between species.
- Primarily updates among African and Indian Ocean amphibians, plus some splits or first assessments among Atelopus harlequin toads.
- A lot of the 610 species assessed this time around are African freshwater fish, including tigerfish and cichlids. One species popular in the aquarium trade, the masked julie
Julidochromis transcriptus, has moved from Least Concern to Critically Endangered. - The remaining species are marine, including a lot of first-time assessments for blennies, dottybacks and stargazers.
- The spinetail devil ray has moved from Endangered to Critically Endangered.
- The Pacific angelshark has moved from Near Threatened to Vulnerable.
- Most of the remaining 115 species are marine and freshwater rays.
- Most of the insects are assessments of European bee species.
- Most of the arachnid assessments are of Saint Helena endemic species.
- The granulated calloused beach pillbug, a beach woodlouse from Namibia and South Africa, has been assessed for the first time as Endangered.
- The violet click beetle has moved from Endangered to Vulnerable.