The world's 100 most threatened species


The World's 100 most threatened species 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, along with the Zoological Society of London. The report was published by the Zoological Society of London in 2012 as the book, Priceless or Worthless?
While all the species on the list are threatened with extinction, the scientists who chose them had another criterion: all the species have no obvious benefit for humans and therefore humans have no vested interests trying to save them. Iconic and charismatic species, such as tigers and pandas—along with economically important species—have many defenders, while these apparently "worthless" species had none. The title of the report, "Priceless or Worthless?", is based on that shared quality of the species. The report's co-author, Ellen Butcher, stated one of the guiding principles of the list, "If we take immediate action we can give them a fighting chance for survival. But this requires society to support the moral and ethical position that all species have an inherent right to exist."
The report was released in Jeju, South Korea, on September 11, 2012, at the quadrennial meeting of IUCN, the World Conservation Congress. At the Congress, it was reported that scientists are finding it more and more common to have to justify funding for protection of species by showing what the human benefits would be. Jonathan Baillie, of the Zoological Society of London and co-author of the report, stated that, "The donor community and conservation movement are increasingly leaning towards a 'what can nature do for us?' approach, where species and wild habitats are valued and prioritised according to these services they provided for people. This has made it increasingly difficult for conservationists to protect the most threatened species on the planet."
Some of the threatened species are down to only a handful of surviving members. Santa Catarina’s guinea pig, native to a single island in Brazil, is down to its last 40–60 individuals, reduced by hunting and habitat disturbance. The great Indian bustard is threatened by habitat loss resulting from agriculture and human development, and is down to the last 50–249 individuals. Elaeocarpus bojeri, a flowering plant found only on the island of Mauritius, has fewer than 10 surviving individuals, because of loss of habitat. The Baishan fir, native to China, is down to five surviving mature individuals. Priceless or Worthless? describes the threats that each species is facing, along with measures that would aid their survival.

Species list

SpeciesCommon nameTypeImageLocationEstimated populationThreats
Abies beshanzuensisBaishan firPlant Baishanzu Mountain, Zhejiang, ChinaFive mature individuals
  • agriculture
  • fire
Actinote zikaniInsect Near São Paulo, Atlantic forest, BrazilUnknown
  • habitat loss from human expansion
  • Aipysurus foliosquamaLeaf scaled sea-snakeReptileAshmore Reef and Hibernia Reef, Timor SeaUnknown
  • unknown—probably degradation of coral reef habitat
  • Amanipodagrion gilliesiAmani flatwingInsect Amani-Sigi Forest, Usamabara Mountains, Tanzania< 500 individuals
  • population pressure and water pollution
  • Anisolabis seychellensisInsectMorne Blanc, Mahé island, SeychellesUnknown
  • invasive species
  • climate change
  • Antilophia bokermanniAraripe manakinBirdChapado do Araripe, South Ceará, Brazil779 individuals
  • recreational facilities
  • water diversion
  • Aphanius transgrediensAci Göl toothcarpFishsouth-eastern shore of former Lake Aci, Turkeyfew hundred pairs
  • competition and predation by Gambusia
  • road construction
  • Aproteles bulmeraeBulmer’s fruit batMammalLuplupwintern Cave, Western Province, Papua New Guinea150
  • hunting
  • cave disturbance
  • Ardea insignisWhite bellied heronBirdBhutan, North East India and Myanmar70–400 individuals
  • hydropower development
  • Ardeotis nigricepsGreat Indian bustardBirdRajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Madhya, India50–249 mature individuals
  • agricultural development
  • energy transmission lines
  • Astrochelys yniphoraPloughshare tortoiseReptileBaly Bay region, northwestern Madagascar440–770
  • illegal collection for international pet trade
  • Atelopus baliosRio Pescado stubfoot toadAmphibianAzuay, Cañar and Guyas provinces, south-western EcuadorUnknown
  • Chytridiomycosis
  • logging
  • agricultural expansion
  • Aythya innotataMadagascar pochardBirdvolcanic lakes north of Bealanana, Madagascar80 mature individuals
  • agriculture
  • hunting and fishing
  • introduced fish
  • Azurina eupalamaGalapagos damsel fishFishUnknownUnknown
  • climate change
  • oceanographic changes related to the 1982/1983 El Nino
  • Bahaba taipingensisGiant yellow croakerFishChinese coast from Yangtze River, China to Hong KongUnknown
  • over-fishing due to value of swim-bladder in traditional medicine
  • Batagur baskaCommon batagurReptile Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Indonesia and MalaysiaUnknown
  • illegal export China
  • Bazzania bhutanicaPlantBudini and Lafeti Khola, Bhutan2 sub-populations
  • forest clearance
  • overgrazing
  • development
  • Beatragus hunteriHirolaMammal South-east Kenya and possibly south-west Somalia< 1,000 individuals
  • habitat loss
  • competition with livestock
  • poaching
  • Bombus frankliniFranklin’s bumblebeeInsect Oregon and CaliforniaUnknown
  • disease from commercial bumblebees
  • habitat destruction and degradation
  • Brachyteles hypoxanthusNorthern muriquiWoolly spider monkeyMammal Atlantic forest, south-eastern Brazil< 1,000
    • large-scale deforestation and logging
    Bradypus pygmaeusPygmy three-toed slothMammalIsla Escudo de Veraguas, Panama< 500
  • illegal logging of mangrove forests for firewood and construction
  • hunting
  • Callitriche pulchraPlant pool on Gavdos, GreeceUnknown
  • habitat exploitation by livestock
  • modification of the pool by locals
  • Calumma tarzanTarzan’s chameleonReptileAnosibe An’Ala region, eastern Madagascar< 100
  • agriculture
  • Cavia intermediaSanta Catarina’s guinea pigMammal Moleques do Sul Island, Santa Catarina, Brazil40–60
  • habitat disturbance
  • possible hunting
  • result of having such a small population
  • Cercopithecus rolowayRoloway guenonMammal Côte d'IvoireUnknown
  • hunting
  • habitat loss
  • Coleura seychellensisSeychelles sheath-tailed batMammal Two small caves on Silhouette and Mahé, Seychelles< 100
  • habitat degradation
  • predation by invasive species
  • Cryptomyces maximusWillow blisterFungiPembrokeshire, United KingdomUnknown
  • limited habitat
  • Cryptotis nelsoniNelson’s small-eared shrewMammal Volcán San Martín Tuxtla, Veracruz, MexicoUnknown
  • logging
  • cattle grazing
  • fire
  • agriculture
  • Cyclura colleiJamaican iguanaJamaican rock iguanaReptileHellshire Hills, JamaicaUnknown
    • habitat destruction
    • predation by introduced species
    Daubentonia MadagascariensisAye-ayeMammal Deciduous forest, East MadagascarUnknown
  • poaching
  • limited habitat
  • Dendrophylax fawcettiiCayman Islands ghost orchidPlant Ironwood Forest, George Town, Grand CaymanUnknown
  • infrastructure development
  • Dicerorhinus sumatrensisSumatran rhinoMammal Sabah, Sarawak and Peninsular Malaysia, Kalimantan and Sumatra, Indonesia< 100
  • hunting
  • Diomedea amsterdamensisAmsterdam albatrossBirdBreeds on Plateuau des Tourbières, Amsterdam Island, Indian Ocean.100 mature individuals
  • disease
  • incidental by-catch in long-line fishing
  • Dioscorea strydomianaWild yamPlantOshoek area, Mpumalanga, South Africa200
  • collection for medicinal use
  • Diospyros katendeiPlant Kasyoha-Kitomi Forest Reserve, Uganda20 individuals in a single population
  • agricultural activity
  • illegal tree felling
  • alluvial gold digging
  • small population
  • Dipterocarpus lamellatusPlant Siangau Forest Reserve, Sabah, Malaysia12 individuals
  • logging of lowland forest
  • creation of industrial plantations
  • Discoglossus nigriventerHula painted frogAmphibianHula Valley, IsraelUnknown
  • predation by birds
  • range restriction due to habitat destruction
  • Dombeya mauritianaPlantMauritiusUnknown
  • encroachment by invasive plant species
  • habitat loss due to cannabis cultivation
  • Elaeocarpus bojeriBois DentellePlant Grand Bassin, Mauritius< 10 individuals
  • habitat degradation
  • Eleutherodactylus glanduliferLa Hotte glanded frogAmphibianMassif de la Hotte, HaitiUnknown
  • charcoal production
  • slash-and-burn agriculture
  • Eleutherodactylus thorecetesMacaya breast-spot frogAmphibianFormon and Macaya peaks, Masif de la Hotte, HaitiUnknown
  • charcoal production
  • slash-and-burn agriculture
  • Eriosyce chilensisChilenito PlantPta Molles and Pichidungui, Chile< 500 individuals
  • collection of flowering plants
  • Erythrina schliebeniiCoral treePlantNamatimbili-Ngarama Forest, Tanzania< 50 individuals
  • limited habitat and small population size increase vulnerability
  • Euphorbia tanaensisPlant Witu Forest Reserve, Kenya4 mature individuals
  • illegal logging
  • agricultural expansion
  • infrastructure development
  • Eurynorhyncus pygmeusSpoon-billed sandpiperBirdBreeds in Russia, migrates along the East Asian-Australasian Flyway to wintering grounds in India, Bangladesh and Myanmar100 breeding pairs
  • trapping
  • land reclamation
  • Ficus katendeiPlantKasyoha-Kitomi Forest Reserve, Ishasha River, Uganda< 50 mature individuals
  • agriculture
  • illegal tree felling
  • alluvial gold digging
  • Geronticus eremitaNorthern bald ibisBirdBreeds in Morocco, Turkey and Syria. Syrian population winters incentral Ethiopia.about 3000 individuals
    • habitat degradation and destruction
    • hunting
    Gigasiphon macrosiphonPlant Kaya Muhaka, Gongoni and Mrima Forest Reserves, Kenya, Amani Nature Reserve, West Kilombero Scarp Forest Reserve, and Kihansi Gorge, Tanzania33
  • timber extraction
  • agriculture encroachment and development
  • predation by wild pigs
  • Gocea ohridanaMolluscLake Ohrid, MacedoniaUnknown
  • increasing pollution levels
  • off-take of water
  • sedimentation events
  • Heleophryne roseiTable mountain ghost frogAmphibianTable Mountain, Western Cape Province, South AfricaUnknown
  • invasive plants
  • water abstraction
  • Hemicycla paetelianaMollusc Jandia peninsula, Fuerteventura, Canary IslandsUnknown
  • overgrazing
  • trampling by goats and tourists
  • Heteromirafa sidamoensisLiben larkBirdLiben Plains, southern Ethiopia90–256
  • agricultural expansion
  • overgrazing
  • fire suppression
  • Hibiscadelphus woodiiPlant Kalalau Valley, HawaiiUnknown
  • habitat degradation due to feral ungulates
  • competition with invasive plant species
  • Hucho perryiSakhalin taimenFishRussian and Japanese rivers, Pacific Ocean between Russia and JapanUnknown
  • overfishing
  • damming
  • agriculture
  • other land use
  • Johora singaporensisSingapore freshwater crabCrustaceanBukit Timah Nature Reserve and streamlet near Bukit Batok, SingaporeUnknown
  • habitat degradation due to reduction in water quality and quantity
  • Lathyrus belinensisBelin vetchlingPlantOutskirts of Belin village, Antalya, Turkey< 1,000
  • urbanisation
  • over-grazing
  • conifer planting
  • road widening
  • Leiopelma archeyiArchey’s frogAmphibianCoromandel peninsula and Whareorino Forest, New ZealandUnknown
  • Chytridiomycosis
  • predation by invasive species
  • Lithobates sevosusDusky gopher frogAmphibianHarrison County, Mississippi, USA60–100
  • fungal disease
  • climate change
  • land-use changes
  • Lophura edwardsiEdwards’s pheasantBirdQuang Binh, Quang Tri and Thua Thien-Hue, Viet NamUnknown
  • habitat loss
  • hunting
  • Magnolia wolfiiPlant Risaralda, Colombia3
  • isolation of species
  • low regeneration rates
  • Margaritifera marocanaMolluscOued Denna, Oued Abid and Oued Beth, Morocco< 250
  • pollution
  • development
  • Moominia williiMollusc Silhouette Island, Seychelles< 500
  • invasive species
  • climate change
  • Natalus primusCuban greater funnel eared batMammal Cueva La Barca, Isle of Pines, Cuba< 100
  • habitat loss
  • human disturbance
  • Nepenthes attenboroughiiAttenborough’s pitcher plantPlantMount Victoria, Palawan, PhilippinesUnknown
  • poaching
  • Nomascus hainanusHainan black crested gibbonMammal Hainan Island, China20
  • hunting
  • Neurergus kaiseriLuristan newtAmphibianZagros Mountains, Lorestan, Iran< 1,000
  • illegal collection for pet trade
  • Oreocnemis phoenixMulanje red damselInsect Mulanje Plateau, MalawiUnknown
  • habitat destruction and degradation due to drainage
  • agricultural expansion
  • exploitation of forest
  • Pangasius sanitwongseiPangasid catfishFishChao Phraya and Mekong basins in Cambodia, China, Lao PDR, Thailand and Viet NamUnknown
  • overfishing
  • collection for aquarium trade
  • Parides burchellanusInsect Cerrado, Brazil< 100
  • human expansion
  • limited range
  • Phocoena sinusVaquitaMammal Northern Gulf of California, Mexico12
  • capture in fishermen's gillnets
  • Picea neoveitchiiType of spruce treePlant Qinling Range, ChinaUnknown
  • destruction of forest
  • Pinus squamataQiaojia pinePlant Qiaojia, Yunnan, China< 25
  • limited distribution
  • small population size
  • Poecilotheria metallicaGooty tarantulaMetallic tarantula
    Peacock tarantula
    Salepurgu
    SpiderNandyal and Giddalur, Andhra Pradesh, IndiaUnknown
    • deforestation
    • firewood collection
    • civil unrest
    Pomarea whitneyiFatuhiva monarchBirdFatu Hiva, Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia50
  • predation by introduced species - Rattus rattus and feral cats
  • Pristis pristisCommon sawfishFishCoastal tropical and subtropical waters of Indo-Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Currently largely restricted to northern AustraliaUnknown
  • exploitation has removed the species from 95 per cent of its historical range
  • Prolemur simusGreater bamboo lemurMammal Southeastern and southcentral rainforests of Madagascar500
  • agriculture
  • mining
  • illegal logging
  • Propithecus candidusSilky sifakaMammal Maroantsetra to Andapa basin, and Marojeju Massif, Madagascar100–1,000
  • hunting
  • habitat disturbance
  • Psammobates geometricusGeometric tortoiseReptileWestern Cape Province, South AfricaUnknown
  • loss of habitat destruction
  • predation
  • Pseudoryx nghetinhensisSaolaMammalAnnamite mountains, on the Viet Nam - PDR Laos borderUnknown
  • habitat destruction
  • hunting
  • Psiadia cataractaePlantMauritiusUnknown
  • development project
  • competition from invasive plant species
  • Psorodonotus ebneriBeydaglari bush-cricketInsectBeydaglari range, Antalaya, TurkeyUnknown
  • climate change
  • habitat loss
  • Rafetus swinhoeiRed River giant softshell turtleReptileHoan Kiem Lake and Dong Mo Lake, Viet Nam, and Suzhou Zoo, China4
  • hunting for consumption
  • wetland destruction
  • pollution
  • Rhinoceros sondaicusJavan rhinoMammal Ujung Kulon National Park, Java, Indonesia< 100
  • hunting for traditional medicine
  • small population size
  • Rhinopithecus avunculusTonkin snub-nosed monkeyMammal Northeastern Vietnam< 200
  • habitat loss
  • hunting
  • Rhizanthella gardneriWest Australian underground orchidPlant Western Australia, Australia< 100
  • land clearance for agriculture
  • climate change
  • salinisation
  • Rhynchocyon spp.Boni giant sengiMammal Boni-Dodori Forest, Lamu area, KenyaUnknown
  • development causing habitat loss
  • Risiocnemis seidenschwarziCebu frill-wingInsect Rivulet beside the Kawasan River, Cebu, PhilippinesUnknown
  • habitat degradation and destruction
  • Rosa arabicaPlantSt Katherine Mountains, EgyptUnknown, 10 sub-populations
  • domestic animal grazing
  • climate change and drought
  • medicinal plant collecting
  • limited range
  • Salanoia durrelliDurrell’s vontsiraMammal Marshes of Lake Alaotra, MadagascarUnknown
  • loss of habitat
  • Santamartamys rufodorsalisRed crested tree ratMammal Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, ColombiaUnknown
  • urban development
  • coffee cultivation
  • Scaturiginichthys vermeilipinnisRed-finned blue-eyeFishEdgbaston Station, central western Queensland, Australia2,000–4,000
  • predation by introduced species
  • Squatina squatinaAngel sharkFishCanary IslandsUnknown
  • benthic trawling
  • Sterna bernsteiniChinese crested ternBirdBreeding in Zhejiang and Fujian, China. Outside breeding season in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand.< 50
  • habitat destruction
  • egg collection
  • Syngnathus watermeyeriEstuarine pipefishFishKariega Estuary to East Kleinemonde Estuary, Eastern Cape Province, South AfricaUnknown
  • dam construction is altering river flows
  • flood events into estuaries
  • Tahina spectabilisSuicide palm DimakaPlantAnalalava district, north-western Madagascar90
    • fires
    • logging
    • agricultural developments
    Telmatobufo bullockiBullock’s false toadAmphibian Nahuelbuta, Arauco Province, ChileUnknown
  • construction of hydro-electricity
  • Tokudaia muenninkiOkinawa spiny ratMammal Okinawa Island, JapanUnknown
  • habitat loss
  • predation by feral cats
  • Trigonostigma somphongsiSomphongs’s rasboraFishMae Khlong basin, ThailandUnknown
  • farmland conversion and urbanization
  • Valencia letourneuxiFishSouthern Albania and Western GreeceUnknown
  • habitat destruction
  • water abstraction
  • aggressive interaction with Gambusia
  • Voanioala gerardiiForest coconutPlantMasoala peninsula, Madagascar< 10
  • deforestation
  • harvesting for consumption of palm heart
  • Zaglossus attenboroughiAttenborough’s echidnaMammalCyclops Mountains, Papua Province, IndonesiaUnknown
  • habitat modification and degradation
  • logging
  • agricultural encroachment shifting cultivation and hunting by local people