Cheetah, Hammerhead Shark, and 38 Other Animals in Danger of Extinction Receive New International Protections from U.N.
Cheetah, Hammerhead Shark, and 38 Other Animals in Danger of Extinction Receive New International Protections from U.N.

NEED TO KNOW

  • Representatives from 132 countries and the EU met in Brazil to address threats to migratory species

  • Species receiving new protections include cheetahs, snowy owls, striped hyenas, giant otters, and great hammerhead sharks

  • Habitat loss, climate change, and pollution are driving declines in many species protected under the treaty

Forty at-risk animal species are gaining new protections from the United Nations.

At a U.N. wildlife conservation meeting in Campo Grande, Brazil, on March 29, the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) adopted several measures to strengthen global and regional conservation efforts for species at risk of extinction. The summit brought together representatives from 132 countries and the European Union.

The list of animals that benefit from these new measures includes cheetahs, snowy owls, spotted hyenas, great hammerhead sharks, and several shorebird species.

A school of hammerhead sharks in 2017.Credit: Alexis Rosenfeld/Getty
A school of hammerhead sharks in 2017.
Credit: Alexis Rosenfeld/Getty

"From cheetahs and striped hyenas to snowy owls, giant otters and great hammerhead sharks, CMS Parties have backed stronger international action as new evidence shows many migratory species are moving closer to extinction," the CMS wrote in an X post.

Parties at the conservation meeting agreed to list the 40 additional species on CMS lists of species in danger of extinction and species in need of coordinated international action. The CMS lists now include over 1,200 unique species.

The week-long conference opened with new findings showing that many treaty-protected species continue to trend downward due to habitat loss, overexploitation, and infrastructure barriers, accelerating declines across species that span national borders.

An otter in GermanyCredit: VOLKER HARTMANN/DDP/AFP via Getty
An otter in Germany
Credit: VOLKER HARTMANN/DDP/AFP via Getty

The group also addressed a growing need to combat threats such as deep-sea mining, climate change, plastic pollution, underwater noise, illegal wildlife killing, fisheries, and marine pollution.

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"We came to Campo Grande knowing that the populations of half the species protected under this treaty are in decline," CMS Executive Secretary Amy Fraenkel said in a statement.

"We leave with stronger protections and more ambitious plans, but the species themselves are not waiting for our next meeting. Expanded protections for striped hyena, snowy owls, giant otters, great hammerhead sharks, and many more demonstrate that nations can act when the science is clear. Our duty now is to close the distance between what we've agreed and what happens on the ground for these animals," she added.

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