First-ever multi-taxon global freshwater fauna assessment identifies Western Ghats as a hotspot of threatened species
The Hindu
IUCN study in Nature reveals threats to freshwater biodiversity, with Western Ghats as a hotspot for endangered species.
The first-ever multi-taxon global freshwater fauna assessment for The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species has identified Western Ghats as a key location with greatest abundance of threatened freshwater species.
The study co-authored by species experts from all geographical regions of the world also revealed that a staggering one-quarter of the freshwater fauna are threatened with extinction.
Employing a rigorous expert consultation process and quantitative criteria while covering 23,496 decapod crustaceans, fishes and odonates, this comprehensive global assessment evaluates the extinction risk and conservation status for diverse freshwater fauna groups.
With approximately one-quarter of freshwater species facing a high extinction risk, and a record of 89 confirmed and 187 suspected extinctions since 1500 AD, the study is a major step towards mitigating further species losses.
The study led by IUCN and published in the multidisciplinary science journal, Nature, underscores the historical underappreciation of freshwater ecosystems in global environmental governance.
Previously often categorised within terrestrial or marine realms, freshwater environments now demand distinct management strategies due to their unique characteristics. While concentrations of threatened species are relatively smaller and spatially dispersed, the study pinpoints Lake Victoria (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda), Lake Titicaca (Bolivia and Peru), Sri Lanka’s Wet Zone, and the Western Ghats (India) as hotspots of threatened freshwater species richness.
These findings are the culmination of over 20 years of comprehensive assessments involving contributions from more than 1,000 species experts.
Bengaluru has witnessed a significant drop in temperature this winter, especially from mid-December, 2024. The Meteorological Centre, Bengaluru, in its observation data recorded at 8.30 a.m. on January 8, said that the minimum temperature recorded at the city observatory was 16.4 °C. The minimum temperatures recorded at HAL Airport and the Kempegowda International Airport were 15.2 °C and 15.0 °C. Just before that, on January 4, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) alerted a significant drop in temperatures, with the predicting a minimum of 10.2 °C, which is below the city’s January average minimum of 15.8 °C and is attributed to the cold wave sweeping across northern India.
An upcoming film festival, Eco Reels - Climate Charche Edition, which is being organised by BSF in collaboration with the Kriti Film Club for the first time in the city, seeks to do precisely this, aiming to spotlight pressing issues of climate crisis, adaptation and mitigation, environmental challenges and people’s struggles in this context, scientific and policy debates, across urban and rural landscapes, as the event’s release states. “The curated films will bring to the fore issues of urban flooding, heat, pollution, waste and more, as well as rural concerns around water, waste, and other climatic impacts on people and natural resources, as well as innovations, adaptation and mitigation strategies,” it adds.