So is this all just a lie/hoax?
So exaggeration?No, merely people jumping to conclusions about the implications of a single study.
I'm sure they do, since I heard that in the Mexico City zoos, the amount of rabbits totals over 300.Correct if I'm wrong, but does the Chapultepec zoo in Mexico still hold any of these specimens?
The "news" report definitely is way past sell date and given that already in the last IUCN Red List assessment the species was de-listed as present / extinct on the Nevado de Toluca mountain range, it is jumping to conclusions that never have been.Agree with @FunkyGibbon that the article seems more like clickbait... The IUCN last assessed the species in 2008, but listed it as an increasing population, as @Swampy pointed out. If the last wild volcano rabbit was seen in 2003 as the article claims, I can't imagine the IUCN would have listed it like they did.
Additionally, the news article states that the rabbit was"declared extinct in the vicinity of the Nevado de Toluca." But on IUCN's species profile, that volcano is listed under historical range when it was assessed in 2008! "[Volcano rabbit has] apparently disappeared from some of its historical range in the central Transverse Neovolcanic Belt, including the eastern slopes of Iztaccihuatl and the Nevada de Toluca (Fa and Bell 1990)" So supposedly a study in 1990 found the species to have disappeared in the area they just claimed it has gone extinct in. Apparently it was gone from that volcano almost 30 years ago. The news article says nothing about the other 4 volcanos where the rabbit was known to occur in 2008, nor any captive populations.
Based on the current information, I am not convinced the volcano rabbit is extinct. Hopefully someone can provide some more information here soon.
Surely this is putting quite a positive spin on things? Whilst it may be a good measure of public interest it seems quite a destructive method of doing so. Firstly some people will genuinely believe the rabbit is extinct; hardly a recipe for action to prevent it's demise. Secondly people may take future bad news or warnings less seriously if they do understand this was misleading. A case of 'The boy who cried volcano rabbit', if you will.Yes, the report was that the teporingo maybe extinct on the Nevado de Toluca but not in other localities. There are over 300 volcano rabbits at Chapultepec zoo and the other México city zoos. Still all the attetion this note has had is positive because it shows how much the general públic is interested in teporingos in México and other countries