North America’s Most Endangered Animals

Snails, marmots, condors and coral reef are among the many species on the continent that are close to extinction

  • By Megan Gambino, Erin Wayman and Sarah Zielinski
  • Smithsonian.com, May 19, 2011
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Oahu tree snails Red wolf Kemps Ridley sea turtle California condor Vancouver Island marmot Giant sea bass
Giant sea bass

(Ralph A. Clevenger / Corbis)


Giant Sea Bass (Stereolepis gigas)

In waters along rocky reefs off the West Coast, from Northern California to Baja and the Gulf of California, swims the giant sea bass. These top predators, which can reach lengths of seven feet and weights of 500 pounds or more, live near kelp beds and feast on smaller fish such as anchovies and sardines, along with crabs, spiny lobster and even small sharks. Commercial fishermen started pulling giant sea bass out of the water with hand lines in 1870, but after they switched to gill nets, they quickly drove down the fish’s numbers: the fishery peaked in the 1930s at around a million pounds of giant sea bass caught in a year. By 1980 fishermen caught less than 40,000 pounds of the fish.

In 1981 California severely limited giant sea bass fishing in its waters. While there is no hard data showing that the fish’s population has recovered, scuba divers say there are more of the fish in the waters at popular dive spots off La Jolla and Anacapa and Catalina Islands. Mexico, however, is a different story, as giant sea bass fishing continues there unfettered. – SZ

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Comments (11)

Omg that is so cool but sad at the same time

that giant sea bass is huge.Who knew the most endangerd speicies is a snail.

Doing a project on the 1st HELP ME!!!

do yall like them

I cant belive it

this is realy realy nice.i like it very much.

Hunting actually was a minor contributor to the Red Wolf demise. Habitat loss was a major contributor, but the finishing blow was the expansion eastward of the Coyote. They crossbred with the Red Wolf and just about wiped them out.

There was a viable population of the wolf in southern AR until the late 1940s. That's when coyotes began to show up. By the mid to late 1950s the wolf had disappeared.

Add an Ivory Billed Woodpecker!

thank you, thank you, thank you from my heart for saving the habitat as well as these beautiful wolves. i feel a strong connection to all wolves and this story was uplifting, encouraging, and worth my two minute feeble effort to say thank you for caring about and taking action to save these animals.

Our eyes are in the front of our heads but we are blind to the future of the earth and its inhabitants. We are the last species to evolve from earth's origins (not inclduing nuclear mutations) and we seem to be intent on being its last to survive our own predatory habits. Wait. Isn't that why we have wars, to eliminate ourselves?

A porpoise endemic to Mexico, the vaquita (Phocoena sinus) is now widely-recognized by marine mammal biologists as the most-endangered marine mammal in the world (Jaramillo-Legorreta et al. 2007). The species is listed as Critically Endangered by the IUCN Red List authority, and as Endangered on the U.S. Endangered Species List, and Mexico has also listed the vaquita as Endangered and considered it the first of five top-priority species for conservation action (SEMARNAT 2008).

Population size of the vaquita was estimated in 2008 from a line-transect survey. The resulting estimate was 245 individuals (Gerrodette et al. 2011). This is much lower than a 1997 estimate using similar methods (567 individuals - Jaramillo-Legorreta et al. 1999). From this, it was estimated that the population has been declining by 7.6% per year, and if the decline has continued in the last couple of years, then there would likely be only about 200 porpoises left now. All this means there is a window of at most a few years in which to implement solutions to save the species (see Jaramillo-Legorreta et al. 2007).



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