Bisons revive, freshwater dolphins dwindle: Conservationists

The finding from the International Union for Conservation of Nature comes as its latest "Red List" of threatened species, released on Thursday, also showed that populations of the European bison - Europe's largest land mammal - have improved, even as the list of extinct species overall has continued to expand.
"The European bison and 25 other species recoveries documented in today's IUCN Red List update demonstrate the power of conservation," said Dr Bruno Oberle, IUCN's director-general.
Still, the conservation group said 31 species have been declared extinct in the latest of its regular updates of the list, including three Central American frog species and 15 freshwater fish species endemic to a single lake in the Philippines. A South China Sea shark, last seen in 1934 and only formally described last year, is thought to be "possibly extinct."
Craig Hilton-Taylor, head of the IUCN red list, said the impact of human activity was a driver for many species nearing extinction.
The tucuxi, a small gray dolphin found in the Amazon River system, is now listed as "endangered." Its numbers have been severely depleted by human activity, including fishing gear, the damming of rivers and pollution. Previously there wasn't enough information to determine its status.
The Gland, Switzerland-based group cites three other freshwater dolphin species - the Amazon river dolphin, the South Asian river dolphin and the Yangtze River dolphin in China, though it may already be extinct - as threatened, along with the Yangtze finless porpoise, IUCN spokesman Matthias Fiechter said.
IUCN says nearly 129,000 species are on its list, including 35,765 threatened with extinction. The "red list" breaks down threatened species into vulnerable, endangered and critically endangered categories - the last of these meaning those closest to extinction.
Once widespread across Europe several centuries ago, the continent's largest land mammal was hunted, and its numbers declined dramatically.
"There's a huge push across Europe, what they call re-wilding, trying to restore habitats that have been transformed by people back into wild habitat again and bring back a lot of these species that have been lost," Hilton-Taylor said.
IUCN, which was founded in 1948, brings together more than 1,400 member organizations and 15,000 experts and bills itself as one of the world's largest environmental networks.
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