Biodiversity losses accelerate in 21st century

Vertebrate populations have declined sharply since 1970 while insect numbers have fallen dramatically in protected areas.

The World Wildlife Foundation and Zoological Society of London’s 2024 Living Planet Report recorded a 73 percent average drop in monitored populations of 5,495 vertebrate species between 1970 and 2020. Freshwater species declined 85 percent and populations in Latin America and the Caribbean fell 95 percent. A 2019 Science study found nearly 3 billion breeding birds lost in North America since 1970. Amphibians face the greatest risk, with 41 percent of species threatened according to the 2023 Global Amphibian Assessment. A 2020 Science meta-analysis showed terrestrial insects declining about 9 percent per decade. The Krefeld study documented a more than 75 percent drop in flying insect biomass in German nature reserves between 1989 and 2017. Seventy-five percent of leading food crops depend partly on animal pollination. The article notes that half of tracked vertebrate populations remain stable or are increasing.

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