Wednesday 11 December 2013

Study documents catastrophic collapse of Sahara-wildlife

This shows some of the world's 
200 remaining wild addax in 
Termit and Tin Toumma National
Nature Reserve in Niger
December 2013: The world's largest tropical desert, the Sahara, has suffered a catastrophic collapse of its wildlife populations according to a study led by the Wildlife Conservation Society and Zoological Society of London.

The scientists assessed 14 desert species and found that a shocking half of those are regionally extinct or confined to one percent or less of their historical range. The Bubal hartebeest is extinct; the scimitar horned oryx is extinct in the wild; and the African wild dog and African lion have vanished from the Sahara.

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