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  1. Common name Scientific name Conservation status ↓; African forest elephant: Critically Endangered: Amur Leopard: Panthera pardus orientalis: Critically Endangered: Black Rhino: Diceros bicornis: Critically Endangered: Bornean Orangutan: Pongo pygmaeus: Critically Endangered: Cross River Gorilla: Gorilla gorilla diehli: Critically Endangered ...

    • Javan Rhino

      Javan rhinos are the most threatened of the five rhino...

    • Whale Shark

      Demand for their meat, fins and oil remains a threat to the...

    • Hector's Dolphin

      Hector’s dolphins are the smallest and rarest marine...

    • Amur Leopard

      Called Land of the Leopard National Park, this marked a...

    • Red Panda

      Learn about the ways WWF works to protect endangered...

    • Sunda Tiger

      The island of Sumatra is the only place where tigers,...

    • Indian Elephant

      Indian elephants may spend up to 19 hours a day feeding and...

    • Common Name

      WWF is committed to saving endangered species. Learn more...

    • Sumatran Elephant

      Sumatran elephants feed on a variety of plants and deposit...

    • Sumatran Rhino

      The Sumatran rhino once roamed as far away as the foothills...

  2. The IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria are intended to be an easily and widely understood system for classifying species at high risk of global extinction. It divides species into nine categories: Not Evaluated, Data Deficient, Least Concern, Near Threatened, Vulnerable, Endangered, Critically Endangered, Extinct in the Wild and Extinct .

  3. WWF is committed to saving endangered species. Learn more about the species we are working to protecting from becoming endangered or extinct. ... Endangered: Common ...

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  5. Silky sifaka ( Propithecus candidus ), fewer than 1,000 still alive. The World's 100 most threatened species [1] is a compilation of the most threatened animals, plants, and fungi in the world. It was the result of a collaboration between over 8,000 scientists from the International Union for Conservation of Nature Species Survival Commission ...

    Species
    Common Name
    Type
    Image
    Baishan fir
    Plant ( Tree )
    Baishanzu Mountain, Zhejiang, China
    Leaf scaled sea-snake
    Reptile
    Ashmore Reef and Hibernia Reef, Timor ...
    Amani flatwing
    Insect (damselfly)
    Amani-Sigi Forest, Usamabara Mountains, ...
    Araripe manakin
    Bird
    Chapado do Araripe, South Ceará, Brazil
    • Javan Rhinos. Once found throughout south-east Asia, Javan rhinos have suffered a staggering decline in their numbers due to hunting and habitat loss.
    • Amur Leopard. The Amur leopard is one of the rarest big cats in the world, with only around 100 individuals left in the wild. Although their wild population seems to be stable and increasing, these leopard subspecies are still critically endangered since 1996.
    • Sunda Island Tiger. The Sunda Island tiger, or the Sumatran tiger, is the smallest tiger subspecies in the world, weighing up to 140kg. For reference, the tigers that live in the Amur region are the biggest of all the big cats where males can weigh up to twice as much as Sunda Island tigers.
    • Mountain Gorillas. The Mountain gorilla is a subspecies of the eastern gorilla, which lives in two isolated populations in the high-altitude forests up in the volcanic, mountainous regions of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and Uganda, and in the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park of Uganda.
  6. Three tiger subspecies are already extinct (see List of carnivorans by population ). [11] Blue-throated macaw, a critically endangered bird. Brown spider monkey, a critically endangered mammal. Siamese crocodile, a critically endangered reptile. American burying beetle, an endangered species of insect.

  7. An endangered species is a type of organism that is threatened by extinction. Species become endangered for two main reasons: loss of habitat and loss of genetic variation. Loss of Habitat. A loss of habitat can happen naturally. Nonavian dinosaurs, for instance, lost their habitat about 65 million years ago.

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