More and more species are becoming at risk each year. Nida Al-Fulaij from the People’s Trust for Endangered Species takes a look at 10 of the rarest animals in the world

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Published: Monday, 11 December 2023 at 15:10 PM


It won’t be a surprise to anyone that globally we are facing a biodiversity crisis. So many different, and complex, threats are impacting much of our flora and fauna, with many species becoming more at risk every year – whether they live in our deserts, grasslands, jungles or countryside.

The threats facing the world’s polar bears, tigers, and rhinos are common knowledge, but here, Nida Al-Fulaij from People’s Trust for Endangered Species, highlights 10 of the rarest animals in the world that you may not have come across before. These species are just as important as the iconic ones, and range from one of the world’s rarest snakes to Siamese crocodiles that are sadly now absent from 99% of their former range.

Rarest animals in the world

Black and chestnut eagle

Image credit: thibaudaronson, CC BY-SA 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Eagles, some of the world’s most iconic species, are mostly found in Eurasia and Africa. Only a handful of species live in the Americas, including the rare black and chestnut eagle, which has fewer than 250 adults remaining in the wild

One of the largest raptors of the Andes, these kings of the air have a wingspan of almost two metres. Living high in the montane forests from Colombia to Argentina, these birds hunt medium-sized mammals such as squirrels, opossums and porcupines, as well as birds. But as communities expand in the more remote regions, conflict arises as the eagles sometimes take chickens, a loss the local farmers cannot afford. Conflict resolution measures are underway to ensure the birds can live in harmony alongside the local villagers. 

El Rincon stream frogs

Image credit: Pablo Kacoliris/PTES

Living at the southern tip of South America, El Rincon stream frogs are found in one location on a single plateau in Argentinian Patagonia. These frogs survive the frigid cold winters by spending their lives in warm thermal streams. Listed as Critically Endangered, the frogs have been at risk from invasive, aggressive rainbow trout and habitat loss as cattle encroach into their habitat. Fish barriers, fencing and reintroduction efforts are helping this endemic amphibian return to local streams where they’d become extinct. 

Northern river terrapins

Northern river terrapins
Image credit; Philbert Charles Berjeau, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Northern river terrapins (Batagur baska) are one of the most endangered freshwater turtles in the world. Once widespread throughout the mangrove swamps, rivers and estuaries of West Bengal and Odisha in India, their numbers plummeted due to over collection of adults and eggs for food, as well as sand mining and pollution. An emergency search in 2008 found just 12 individuals surviving in the forests of West Bengal. These terrapins have formed the core of a captive breeding population, which has successfully returned the first population into the wild, with plans to establish more. 

Dinagat moonrat

Many endemic species exist on small islands. In the southern part of the Philippines, Dinagat Island is host to two particularly rare animals, the Dinagat moonrat and the Dinagat hairy-tailed rat. These small mammals are so rare that we don’t know how many survive on the tiny island – and we can’t even source a picture. Half of the island is threatened with mining so urgent investigations are underway to try and locate the remaining populations and put protection measures in place to ensure their habitat isn’t lost. 

Hirola antelope

Image credit: Getty Images

Known as the world’s most endangered antelope, hirola number just a few hundred individuals in the wild. Since the 1970s when an estimated 14,000 antelope roamed the grasslands of Kenya and Somalia, various catastrophes have reduced their numbers to just 600. These shockingly low hirola numbers are predominantly a result of habitat loss – a decline in the grassland upon which they depend. These landscape changes have been associated with overgrazing, elephant extirpation, fire suppression and climate variability, compounded by the fact that the region is subject to conflict and drought. Efforts are underway to restore and protect the traditional grasslands they depend on.

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