File:Last of its kind.jpg

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The Last of Its Kind, the Last Male Northern White Rhino


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In the Age of the Anthropocene


“We are living in the middle of a mass extinction today, but none of us feel that urgency, or that it really is so.”

-- Dr. Gerta Keller, Princeton University


Extinction


Sudan the last of his Rhino kind.jpg

Sudan, the last of his Rhino kind


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Earth in Human Hands.jpg



Extinction sixthgreatextinction ohDodo.png


Racing Extinction websiteplankton.jpg


'Tiny Little Ones', the UNSEEN Endangered Species v the LARGE "Charismatic" Species


Racing Extinction, Big & Little


The 8 Million+ Species We Don’t Know

By Edward O. Wilson

March 3, 2018 / New York Times


Species Conservation & Extinction


The most striking fact about the living environment may be how little we know about it. Even the number of living species can be only roughly calculated. A widely accepted estimate by scientists puts the number at about 10 million. In contrast, those formally described, classified and given two-part Latinized names (Homo sapiens for humans, for example) number slightly more than two million. With only about 20 percent of its species known and 80 percent undiscovered, it is fair to call Earth a little-known planet.


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