These 15 cute animals that have been listed as a endangered animals. 
Let's hope they don't go extinct and do our best to protect them.
1. Sand Kittens
2. Fennec Fox
3. Egyptian Tortoise
4. Sea Otters
5. Mexican Axolotl
6. Slow Loris
7. Pika
8. Mandarin Duck
9. Beluga Whales
10. Gray Gentle Lemur
11. Black Footed Ferrets
12. Matschie’s Tree Kangaroo
13. Hawaiian Monk Seals
14. Iberian Lynx Cubs
15. Giant Panda
1. Sand Kittens
|  | 
| Photo credit: Nir Elias / Reuters | 
The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has listed the sand cat (Felis margarita) as a ‘threatened species'. 
2. Fennec Fox
|  | 
| Photo credit: Yuriko Nakao / Reuters / Corbis | 
Native to North Africa and the Middle 
East, the Fennec fox isn’t currently considered an endangered species, 
but its habitat is under threat from human. Fennec fox have large ears 
that help it hunt at night and keep cool by radiating the desert heat.
3. Egyptian Tortoise
|  | 
| Photo credit: Tony Gentile / Reuters / Corbis | 
The Egyptian Tortoise (Testudo kleinmani),
 also known as Kleinman’s tortoise or Leith’s tortoise, is believed to 
be extinct in Egypt, and thousands have been exported to the U.S. and 
other countries for breeding in captivity. It is considered critically 
endangered by the IUCN.
4. Sea Otters
|  | 
| Photo credit: Alaska Stock / Corbis | 
Sea otter was hunted for their pelts 
to near extinction. Sea otter populations in the Pacific Northwest 
dwindled to less than 2,000 animals during the early part of the 20th 
century. Today, they are protected by law, and the species population 
has rebounded to 100,000 to 150,000.
5. Mexican Axolotl
|  | 
| Photo credit: Stephen Dalton / Minden Pictures / Corbis | 
The axolotl
 is a species of salamander, spending its entire life underwater. The 
Axolotl is nearly extinct in the wild, with fewer than 1,200 animals 
remaining in the Xochimilco area of central Mexico, its last remaining 
unspoiled habitat.
6. Slow Loris
|  | 
| Photo credit: Thomas Marent / Minden Pictures / Corbis | 
The slow loris is the world’s only 
venomous primate. It keeps its poison in a sac near the elbow, which it 
sucks out and reportedly swirls around in its mouth before delivering a dangerous bite.
 Native to Indonesia, the slow loris is being hunted into extinction,  
thanks to the supposedly medicinal and spiritual qualities of its flesh.
7. Pika
|  | 
| Photo credit: Getty Images | 
The pika is a small mammal related to 
the rabbit with rounded ears and no discernable tail. The American pika,
 according to the World Wildlife Fund, is particularly vulnerable to 
global warming because it lives in cool, relatively moist habitats found
 at high elevations — environments that could shrink dramatically as the
 Earth heats up.
8. Mandarin Duck
|  | 
| Photo credit: Getty Images | 
The Mandarin ducks, native to East 
Asia, are one of the few duck species that is not hunted or raised for 
food; apparently they taste awful. The males of the species have dramatic plumage
 while the females are generally plainer. While development and large 
scale trapping have thinned their numbers, they’re still found across a 
wide swath of East Asia. 
9. Beluga Whales
|  | 
| Photo credit: Getty Images | 
The Beluga whales were considered to 
be endangered in their Alaska habitat. There are an estimated 100,000 of
 the animals left in the wild. The Beluga whales are sometimes known as 
‘Canaries of the Sea’, because of their wide range of vocalizations, including clicks, chirps and whistles.
10. Gray Gentle Lemur
|  | 
| Photo credit: Getty Images | 
The Gray Gentle Lemur is one of 
several species found exclusively in Madagascar, where it feeds on 
bamboo, giving it its alternate name, the bamboo lemur.
11. Black Footed Ferrets
|  | 
| Photo credit: George Kochaniec, Jr. / The Rocky Mountain News / AP | 
The black footed ferret, a member of 
the weasel family, is considered endangered by the IUCN. In fact, the 
animals were declared extinct in 1979, although two years later a small 
population was discovered in Wyoming. 
12. Matschie’s Tree Kangaroo
|  | 
| Photo credit: Wong Maye-E / AP | 
Found only in the rainforests of 
Australia, West Papua and Papua New Guinea, the tree kangaroos were 
considered to be endangered by the IUCN, because of their limited 
habitat. They literally live in trees, jumping from branch to branch on 
powerful front and back limbs.
13. Hawaiian Monk Seals
|  | 
| Photo credit: Jonathan Blair / Corbis | 
There are only about 1,100 
Hawaiian monk seals left in the wild. Hunted to the brink of extinction 
in the 19th century, they are now a protected species.
14. Iberian Lynx Cubs
|  | 
| Photo credit: Reuters | 
The WWF fears that the Iberian lynx, 
native to Spain and Portugal, may be the first cat species to go extinct
 in more than 2,000 years. There are believed to be only 38 breeding 
females left in wild, thanks to human development and habitat loss. 
15. Giant Panda
|  | 
| Photo credit: Keren Su / Corbis | 
China’s iconic giant panda is 
struggling to survive; while its numbers appear to be higher than once 
suspected, there are still believed to be no more than 3,000 left in the
 wild. Despite strenuous efforts, they also don’t breed very well in 
captivity; they are also susceptible to poaching in the wild. The panda 
has been the symbol of the World Wildlife Fund since 1961.
 
0 comments:
Post a Comment