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Meat-eating humans pushing hundreds of planet’s biggest animals toward extinction

‘Our results suggest we're in the process of eating megafauna to extinction’

Josh Gabbatiss
Science Correspondent
Wednesday 06 February 2019 12:55 EST
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Demand for meat and body parts is driving 60 per cent of the planet's largest species to the brink of extinction
Demand for meat and body parts is driving 60 per cent of the planet's largest species to the brink of extinction (Getty/iStock)

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Humanity’s insatiable appetite for meat is pushing large creatures like elephants and giant salamanders towards extinction, according to a new study.

Hunting for food, medicine and other uses was the main driver of their decline, scientists said after analysing data from 300 species of “megafauna”, which they defined as mammals and fish weighing over 100kg, along with amphibians, birds and reptiles over 40g.

Nine megafauna species have gone extinct in the past 250 years, including two species of giant tortoise and two deer. Around 2 per cent of megafauna are thought to have disappeared within the past 500 years.

However, up to 60 per cent of all large animals could be wiped out entirely or brought to the brink of extinction in coming years, according to the team at Oregon State University which published their findings in the journal Conservation Letters.

Larger animals, which take longer to reproduce and provide more appetising targets for hunters, have a higher proportion of diminishing populations than all other vertebrates put together.

One of the study’s authors, Professor William Ripple, said the team’s results suggested that “we’re in the process of eating megafauna to extinction”.

Human hunting has been blamed for many historical megafauna extinctions, including the loss of the giant creatures that used to prowl Australia such as the marsupial lion and the enormous, wombat-like diprotodon.

Today many animals are hunted for bushmeat, as trophies or to fuel an illegal trade in wildlife parts for use in traditional medicine.

Zimbabwean female group protecting elephants from poachers

One threatened species is the Chinese giant salamander, a human-sized amphibian that is considered a delicacy in parts of Asia.

Other creatures identified by the team include African elephants, ostriches and whale sharks – the largest fish in the world.

While many international efforts are already underway to protect endangered animals such as elephants and rhinos, the scientists called for more concerted multilateral efforts to preserve the full spectrum of megafauna.

They cited the success of the International Whaling Commission as an initiative on which to base future schemes.

“Direct harvest for human consumption of meat or body parts is the biggest danger to nearly all of the large species with threat data available,” said Mr Ripple. “Thus, minimising the direct killing of these vertebrate animals is an important conservation tactic that might save many of these iconic species as well as all of the contributions they make to their ecosystems.”

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