FIRST TIME PODCAST IN ODIA LANGUAGE AT RATHBIOTACLAN
The latest annual report from the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) paints a troubling picture of the planetโs wildlife. Arctic seals are being pushed closer to extinction as climate change melts the sea ice they depend on, while more than half of all bird species worldwide are now in decline due to deforestation, agricultural expansion, and other human pressures.
In the Arctic, all native marine mammals โ including seals, whales, and polar bears โ rely on sea ice for survival. As that ice rapidly disappears, so do their chances of survival. The IUCN has now moved harp, hooded, and bearded seals to higher-risk categories, signaling that these species are increasingly threatened with extinction. The same forces that are destroying their icy homes โ melting glaciers and rising global temperatures โ are also fueling more extreme weather events around the world, linking the fate of Arctic wildlife directly to that of humanity. Helping seals, the report suggests, is part of helping ourselves in the broader fight against climate change.
The outlook for birds is equally worrying. The IUCN found that populations are falling for roughly 61% of bird species worldwide. This decline is driven by the loss of tropical forests, the spread and intensification of agriculture, competition from invasive species, and the effects of climate change. Several species โ including Schlegelโs asity from Madagascar, the black-casqued hornbill from West Africa, and the northern nightingale-wren from Central America โ have been reclassified as near-threatened. Stuart Butchart, chief scientist at BirdLife International, described the finding as an โalarm bell we canโt afford to ignore.โ
Yet, amid the grim news, there is also reason for hope. The updated Red List highlights the impressive recovery of green sea turtles in many regions, thanks to decades of conservation efforts and legal protections. Rima Jabado, deputy chair of the IUCN Species Survival Commission, said the story of the turtles shows how โhope and concern go hand in handโ in conservation. While green sea turtles still face challenges from coastal erosion and habitat loss โ especially in poorer regions โ their rebound proves that focused, long-term action can bring species back from the brink.
The message of the report is clear: though the global biodiversity crisis is deepening, concerted human action can make a real difference.