Timeline of extinctions in the Holocene
This article is a list of biological species, subspecies, and evolutionary significant units that are known to have become extinct during the Holocene, the current geologic epoch, ordered by their known or approximate date of disappearance from oldest to most recent.
The Holocene is considered to have started with the Holocene glacial retreat around 11650 years Before Present (c. 9700 BCE). It is characterized by a general trend towards global warming, the expansion of anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) to all emerged land masses, the appearance of agriculture and animal husbandry, and a reduction in global biodiversity. The latter, dubbed the sixth mass extinction in Earth history, is largely attributed to increased human population and activity, and may have started already during the preceding Pleistocene epoch with the demise of the Pleistocene megafauna.
The following list is incomplete by necessity, since the majority of extinctions are thought to be undocumented, and for many others there isn't a definitive, widely accepted last, or most recent record. According to the species-area theory, the present rate of extinction may be up to 140,000 species per year.[1]
10th millennium BCE
- Mounted skeleton of Teratornis merriami.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Page's crane | Grus pagei | Rancho La Brea, California, United States | 10250-9180 BCE | Undetermined.[2] |
La Brea owl | Oraristix brea | Southern California, United States | 10250-9180 BCE | Undetermined.[2] |
Errant vulture | Neogyps errans | California, United States | 10210-9850 BCE | Undetermined.[2] |
Eurasian cave lion | Panthera spelaea | Northern Eurasia and Beringia | 10045-9905 BCE (confirmed) 8580-8260 BCE (dubious) |
Undetermined.[3] |
Dow's puffin | Fratercula dowi | Channel Islands of California, United States | 10035-9845 BCE | Undetermined.[2] |
Highland gomphothere | Cuvieronius hyodon | Northern and central Andes[4] | 9790 BCE | Hunting?[5] |
Patagonian panther | Panthera onca mesembrina | Patagonia | 9705-9545 | Undetermined.[6] |
Toronto subway deer | Torontoceros hypnogeos | Toronto, Canada | 9690-9040 BCE | Undetermined.[7] |
Haiti pine forest ground sloth | Neocnus dousman | Hispaniola | 9610-9220 BCE | Undetermined.[8] |
Western bison | Bison occidentalis | North America; Eastern Siberia and Japan? | 9590-9250 BCE[7] | Possibly hybridization with ancient bison resulting in modern American bison.[9] |
Dwarf pronghorn | Capromeryx minor | Western United States and northern Mexico | 9580-8860 BCE | Undetermined.[10] |
Chinese cave hyena | Crocuta crocuta ultima | East Asia | 9550 BCE (confirmed) 5850 BCE (unconfirmed) |
Undetermined.[11] |
Shrub-ox | Euceratherium collinum | Southwestern North America | 9550 BCE | Undetermined.[12] |
American mountain deer | Odocoileus lucasi | Rocky Mountains | 9550 BCE | Hunting?[13] |
Stock's pronghorn | Stockoceros sp. | Mexico and Southwestern United States | 9550 BCE | Hunting?[13] |
Southeastern giant tortoise | Hesperotestudo crassiscutata | Southern United States | c. 9515 BCE | Undetermined.[14] |
Sardinian dhole | Cynotherium sardous | Corsica and Sardinia | 9500-9300 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
American lion | Panthera atrox | North America; Western South America? |
9460-9350 BCE (confirmed) 8570-8270 BCE (dubious) |
Undetermined.[3] |
Macrauchenia | Macrauchenia patachonica | Southwestern South America | 9381-9281 BCE[16] | Hunting.[17] |
Long-nosed peccary | Mylohyus nasutus | Eastern United States | 9350 BCE 9050-7550 BCE (dubious)[18] |
Habitat loss and competition with the American black bear.[13] |
Jefferson's ground sloth | Megalonyx jeffersonii | North America | 9190-8870 BCE | Undetermined.[13] |
Pygmy mammoth | Mammuthus exilis | Channel Islands of California, United States | 9130-9030 BCE | Undetermined.[6] |
Californian turkey | Meleagris californica | California, United States | 9100-8380 BCE | Undetermined.[2] |
Wilson's tortoise | Hesperotestudo wilsoni | Southwestern United States | c. 9050 BCE | Undetermined.[14] |
Ryukyu tortoise | Manouria oyamai | Ryukyu, Japan | c. 9050 BCE | Undetermined.[14] |
Cypriot genet | Genetta plesictoides | Cyprus | 9050 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
Miyako roe deer | Capreolus tokunagai | Miyako Island, Ryukyu, Japan | 9050-8050 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
Asphalt stork | Ciconia maltha | Americas | 9050-8050 BCE | Undetermined.[2] |
Miyako long-tailed rat | Diplothrix miyakoensis | Miyako Island, Ryukyu, Japan | 9050-8050 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
Merriam's teratorn | Teratornis merriami | California, United States | 9050-8050 BCE | Undetermined.[2] |
9th millennium BCE
- Mounted skeleton of a North American short-faced bear.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
North American short-faced bear | Arctodus simus | North America | 8995-8845 BCE[6] | Competition with the grizzly bear.[13] |
Mexican horse | Equus conversidens | North America | 8965-8875 BCE[6] 7250-6750 BCE (dubious)[20] |
Hunting.[6] |
Flat-headed peccary | Platygonus compressus | North America | 8850-8750 BCE[21] | Possibly vegetation changes induced by climate change and competition with the American black bear.[13] |
Schneider's duck | Anas schneideri | Converse County, Wyoming, United States | 8800-8300 BCE | Undetermined.[2] |
Large-billed blackbird | Euphagus magnirostris | North America | 8800-8300 BCE | Undetermined.[2] |
Argentinian short-faced bear | Arctotherium tarijense | Argentina[22] | 8470-8320 BCE | Undetermined.[6] |
Stag-moose | Cervalces scotti | Eastern United States | 8430-8130 BCE | Undetermined.[9] |
Woodland muskox | Bootherium bombifrons | North America | 8420 BCE | Undetermined.[10] |
Shasta ground sloth | Nothrotheriops shastensis | Southwestern United States | 8350-7550 BCE[9] | Hunting.[23] |
Giant Cape zebra | Equus capensis | Southern Africa | 8340-3950 BCE | Reduction of grasslands after the end of the Last Glacial Period.[24] |
Giant pika | Ochotona whartoni | Northern North America; Eastern Siberia? |
8301-7190 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Giant beaver | Castoroides ohiensis | North America | 8250-8150 BCE | Undetermined.[21] |
Vero tapir | Tapirus veroensis | Southern United States | 8200-7660 BCE[9] | Hunting.[13] |
Harrington's mountain goat | Oreamnos harringtoni | Southern Rocky Mountains | 8100 BCE[9] | Hunting.[23] |
Little South American horse | Hippidion saldiasi[25] | Eastern South America[26] | 8059 BCE[27] | Hunting.[17] |
Woolly rhinoceros | Coelodonta antiquitatis | Northern Eurasia | 8050-7650 BCE | Shrinking of the mammoth steppe due to warmer and wetter climate conditions.[28] |
South American palmate-antlered deer | Morenelaphus brachyceros | Temperate South America | 8050-5845 BCE | Undetermined.[29] |
8th millennium BCE
- Tracing of paleo-American petroglyphs depicting two Columbian mammoths and an ancient bison.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
South American pointed-antlered deer | Antifer ultra | River Plate and central Chile | c. 7950 BCE | Undetermined.[30] |
North American pampathere | Holmesina septentrionalis | Southeastern United States | 7930 BCE | Undetermined.[13] |
Cuvier's small ground sloth | Catonyx cuvieri | Eastern South America | 7830-7430 BCE | Undetermined.[6][15] |
Panamerican ground sloth | Eremotherium laurillardi[31] | Southern United States to Brazil | 7800-7740 BCE | Undetermined.[32] |
North American sabertooth | Smilodon fatalis | Southern North America and northern South America | 7615-7305 BCE | Prey loss.[13] |
Asian straight-tusked elephant | Palaeoloxodon namadicus | South and east Asia | 7330-6250 BCE (unconfirmed) | Undetermined.[33] |
South American sabertooth | Smilodon populator | Eastern South America | 7330-7030 BCE[15] | Competition with human hunters.[17] |
American camel | Camelops hesternus | Western North America | 7250-5330 BCE | Hunting.[13] |
Scott's horse | Equus scotti | Western North America | 7250-6750 BCE (dubious)[20] 900-720 BCE (dubious)[7] |
Hunting? |
Chilean scelidodont | Scelidodon chiliensis | Western South America[34] | 7160-6760 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Columbian mammoth | Mammuthus columbi | Northern Mexico, western and southern United States | 7100-6300 BCE[7] 3095-2775 BCE (dubious) |
Hunting.[13] |
Giant ghost-faced bat | Mormoops magna | Cuba | 7043-6503 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Greater Cuban nesophontes | Nesophontes major | Cuba | 7043-6507 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Cuban pauraque | Siphonorhis daiquiri | Cuba | 7043-6507 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
7th millennium BCE
- Mounted skeleton of Glyptodon asper.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Long-legged llama | Hemiauchenia macrocephala | North and Central America | 6833-6321 BCE | Hunting.[13] |
Glossothere | Glossotherium sp. | South America | 6810-6650 BCE[15] | Hunting.[17] |
Lowland gomphothere | Notiomastodon platensis | South America[4] | 6810-6650 BCE[15] | Hunting?[13] |
Darwin's mylodon | Mylodon darwini | Pampas and Patagonia | 6689 BCE[13] | Hunting.[17] |
Large South American horse | Equus neogeus | South America[35] | 6660-4880[15] | Hunting.[17] |
Common glyptodont | Glyptodon sp. | Eastern South America | 6660-4880 BCE (confirmed)[15] 5850-4350 BCE (unconfirmed) 2350 BCE (dubious) |
Hunting.[17] |
Brazilian glyptodont | Hoplophorus euphractus | Eastern Brazil | 6660-4880 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Stout-legged llama | Palaeolama mirifica | North, Central, and South America | 6660-4880 BCE[15] | Hunting.[17] |
Eastern giant armadillo | Propraopus sulcatus | Eastern South America[36] | 6660-4880 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Narrow-headed ground sloth | Scelidotherium leptocephalum | Southern South America | 6585-6403 BCE[37] | Hunting?[13] |
Pampean giant armadillo | Eutatus seguini | Northern Argentina and Uruguay[38] | 6389-6060 BCE | Undetermined.[37] |
Yukon horse | Equus lambei | Eastern Beringia | 6150-5750 BCE (confirmed) c. 3750 BCE (unconfirmed)[39] |
Reduction of grasslands after the end of the Last Glacial Period.[28] |
Giant hartebeest | Megalotragus priscus | Southern Africa; Eastern Africa? |
6130-3950 BCE | Reduction of grasslands after the end of the Last Glacial Period.[24] |
Dire wolf | Aenocyon dirus | North America and western South America | 6050-5050 BCE[9] | Competition with the gray wolf.[13] |
American mastodon | Mammut americanum | North America | 6050-5050 BCE[9] | Possibly habitat fragmentation as a result of climate change, and competition with the moose.[13] |
6th millennium BCE
- Mounted skeleton of Megatherium.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kambuaya's triok | Dactylopsila kambuayai | New Guinea | 5941-5596 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
New Guinea greater glider | Petauroides ayamaruensis | New Guinea | 5941-5596 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Bond's springbok | Antidorcas bondi | Southern Africa | 5740-5500 BCE | Reduction of grasslands after the end of the Last Glacial Period.[24] |
Sardinian giant deer | Praemegaceros cazioti | Corsica and Sardinia[40] | 5550 BCE | Undetermined.[41] |
Unnamed South African caprine | ?Makapania sp. | South African mountains | 5483-5221 BCE | Reduction of grasslands after the end of the Last Glacial Period.[24] |
Ibiza rail | Rallus eivissensis | Ibiza, Spain | 5295-4848 BCE | Undetermined, but presumably a result of human colonization.[42] |
Ancient bison | Bison antiquus | North America | 5271-5131 BCE[43] | Possibly hibridization with western bison resulting in modern American bison.[9] |
Giant ground sloth | Megatherium americanum | Temperate South America and the Andes | 5270-4310 BCE[44] | Hunting.[17] |
5th millennium BCE
- Tracings of male and female Irish elk cave art from Cougnac.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Irish elk | Megaloceros giganteus | Europe and southern Siberia | 4901-4831 BCE[45] 600-500 BCE (dubious) |
Reduction of grasslands after the end of the Last Glacial Period, and possibly hunting.[46] |
North African horse | Equus algericus | Maghreb | 4855-4733 BCE | Aridification.[24] |
Majorcan giant dormouse | Hypnomys morpheus | Mallorca, Spain | 4840-4690 BCE | Possibly disease spread by introduced rodents.[47] |
Club-tailed glyptodont[37] | Doedicurus clavicaudatus | South American Pampas | 4765-4445 BCE 3023-2809 BCE (dubious)[48] |
Undetermined.[44] |
Algerian giant deer | Megaceroides algericus | Northern Maghreb | 4691-4059 BCE | Possibly habitat fragmentation.[49] |
Toxodont | Toxodon platensis | South America | 4650-1450 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Jamaican caracara | Caracara tellustris | Jamaica | 4570 BCE - 130 CE | Undetermined.[50] |
North African aurochs | Bos primigenius africanus | North Africa | c. 4000 BCE | Aridification. Domestic descendants survive in captivity.[24] |
North African zebra | Equus mauritanicus | North Africa | c. 4000 BCE | Aridification.[24] |
4th millennium BCE
- Tracing of a steppe bison painted in Altamira Cave.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Steppe bison | Bison priscus | Northern Eurasia and North America | 5050-3850 BCE (Eurasia)[28] 3628-3377 BCE (America)[51] |
Hunting[52] and habitat loss due to climate change.[28] |
Malagasy crowned eagle | Stephanoaetus mahery | Central and southern Madagascar | 3570-3630 BCE (confirmed)[53] 1500-1600 CE (unconfirmed) |
Possibly natural aridification or habitat degradation and prey loss caused by human activity.[54] |
Kauaʻi mole duck | Talpanas lippa | Kaua'i, Hawaii, United States | 3540-3355 BCE | Undetermined.[55] |
Radofilao's sloth lemur | Babakotia radofilai | Northern coast of Madagascar | 3340-2890 BCE | Undetermined.[56] |
Smaller Cuban ground sloth | Parocnus brownii | Cuba | 3290-2730 BCE[6] | Hunting.[8] |
Giant long-horned buffalo | Syncerus antiquus | Africa and the Arabian Peninsula[57] | 3060-2470 BCE | Aridification and competition with domestic cattle for water and pastures.[15] |
Sardinian shrew | Asoriculus similis | Sardinia, Italy | 3050 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
Buka Island mosaic-tailed rat | Melomys spechti | Buka Island, Papua New Guinea | 3050 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
Buka Island solomys | Solomys spriggsarum | Buka Island, Papua New Guinea | 3050 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
Tilos dwarf elephant | Palaeoloxodon tiliensis | Tilos, Greece | 3040-1840 BCE (confirmed) c. 1470-1445 BCE (unconfirmed) |
Undetermined.[58] |
Balearic giant shrew | Nesiotites hidalgo | Gymnesian Islands, Spain | 3030-2690 BCE | Possibly disease spread by introduced rodents.[47] |
3rd millennium BCE
- Representation of the Egyptian god Bennu, allegedly inspired by the Bennu heron.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Balearic cave goat | Myotragus balearicus | Gymnesian Islands, Spain | 2830-2470 BCE | Likely vegetation changes related to aridification or human activity.[59][60] |
Bennu heron | Ardea bennuides | Arabian Peninsula | 2550 BCE | Wetland degradation.[15] |
Niue night heron | Nycticorax kalavikai | Niue | 2550-1550 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Hispaniola monkey | Antillothrix bernensis | Hispaniola | 2508-2116 BCE | Undetermined.[61] |
Small Hispaniola ground sloth | Neocnus comes | Hispaniola | 2483-2399 BCE | Undetermined.[6] |
Larger Cuban ground sloth | Megalocnus rodens | Cuba | 2280-2240 BCE | Undetermined.[62] |
Chatham raven | Corvus moriorum | Chatham Islands, New Zealand | 2134-1408 BCE (confirmed) c. 1350 CE (unconfirmed) |
Undetermined.[15] |
2nd millennium BCE
- Woolly mammoth cave art from Grotte de Rouff, depicting it alongside extant Alpine ibexes.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
New Caledonian terrestrial crocodile | Mekosuchus inexpectatus | New Caledonia and Isle of Pines | 1950-1050 BCE (confirmed) 140-180 CE (unconfirmed) |
Hunting.[63] |
Sumba Island giant rat | Raksasamys tikusbesar | Sumba Island, Indonesia | 1935-1700 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
Indian aurochs | Bos primigenius namadicus | Indian Subcontinent | 1800 BCE | Undetermined. Domestic descendants survive in captivity and as feral populations.[64] |
Woolly mammoth | Mammuthus primigenius | Northern Eurasia and North America | 6390-6270 BCE (America, confirmed)[7] c. 3750 BCE (America, unconfirmed)[39] 3580-3480 BCE (Saint Paul)[65] 2150-1750 BCE (Eurasia)[28] 1795-1675 BCE (Wrangel)[66] |
Hunting[67] and habitat loss due to climate change.[28] |
Short-horned water buffalo | Bubalus mephistopheles | South, central, and east China[37] | 1750-1650 BCE | Undetermined.[68] |
Puerto Rican ground sloth | Acratocnus odontrigonus | Puerto Rico | 1738-1500 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Christensen's pademelon | Thylogale christenseni | New Guinea | 1738-1385 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Hawaiian eagle | Haliaeetus sp. | Hawaii, United States | 1581 BCE[69] | Possibly deforestation, loss of prey, and predation of chicks by introduced rats and pigs.[54] |
New Caledonian giant megapode | Sylviornis neocaledoniae | Grande Terre and Isle of Pines, New Caledonia | 1500 BCE | Hunting.[70] |
Puerto Rican flower bat | Phyllonycteris major | Puerto Rico and Antigua | c. 1500 BCE | Undetermined.[71] |
Leeward Islands curlytail | Leiocephalus cuneus | Antigua and Barbuda | c. 1500 BCE | Undetermined.[71] |
European wild ass | Equus hydruntinus | Southern Europe and Southwest Asia; Northern Europe (Pleistocene) | 1294-1035 BCE (confirmed) 983 BCE - 635 CE (estimated) |
Hunting and habitat fragmentation after the end of the Last Glacial Period.[72] |
Dune shearwater | Puffinus holeae | Canary Islands, Spain; mainland Portugal (Pleistocene) |
1159-790 BCE | Predation by introduced house mice.[73] |
Mona Island tortoise | Chelonoidis monensis | Mona Island of Puerto Rico | c. 1050 BCE | Undetermined.[14] |
Alor Island giant rat | Alormys aplini | Alor Island, Indonesia | 1050 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
Hooijer's giant rat | Hooijeromys nusantenggara | Lesser Sunda Islands, Indonesia | 1050 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
Vanuatu terrestrial crocodile | Mekosuchus kalpokasi | Efate, Vanuatu | 1050 BCE | Hunting.[63] |
Verhoeven's giant tree rat | Papagomys theodoverhoeveni | Flores, Indonesia | 1050 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
1st millennium BCE
- A Sardinian pika's mounted skeleton.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Noble megapode | Megavitiornis altirostris | Fiji | c. 950 BCE | Hunting.[74] |
Fiji giant iguana | Lapitiguana impensa | Fiji | c. 950 BCE | Hunting.[74] |
Fiji terrestrial crocodile | Volia athollandersoni | Fiji | c. 950 BCE | Hunting.[74] |
Tongan tooth-billed pigeon | Didunculus placopedetes | Tonga | 900-750 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Balsam shrew | Crocidura balsamifera | Nile gallery forests, Egypt | 821-171 BCE | Habitat destruction.[15] |
Eurasian muskox | Ovibos moschatus[75] | Northern Eurasia | 820-680 BCE | Hunting.[52] The same species survived in North America and was reintroduced to Eurasia in the 20th century.[76] |
Vanuatu horned turtle | ?Meiolania damelipi | Vanuatu and Viti Levu, Fiji | c. 810 BCE[14] | Hunting.[77] |
Syrian elephant | Elephas maximus asurus | Mesopotamia | 800-700 BCE | Hunting and habitat loss due to agriculture and aridification. However, it's been suggested that it was introduced by humans in the area, which would not make it a valid subspecies.[78] |
MacPhee's shrew tenrec | Microgale macpheei | Southeastern Madagascar | 790-410 BCE | Aridification.[79] |
Jamaican ibis | Xenicibis xympithecus | Jamaica | 787 BCE - 320 CE | Undetermined.[15] |
Law's diving-goose | Chendytes lawi | Coastal California and Oregon, United States | 770-400 BCE | Hunting.[80] |
Consumed scrubfowl | Megapodius alimentum | Tonga and Fiji | 760-660 BCE | Hunting.[81] |
Kaua'i stilt-owl | Grallistrix auceps | Kaua'i, Hawaii, United States | 744-202 BCE | Undetermined.[15] |
Chatham coot | Fulica chathamensis | Chatham Islands, New Zealand | 701-119 BCE (confirmed) c. 1350 CE (unconfirmed)[15] |
Probably hunting and predation by introduced mammals.[54] |
Bahaman caracara | Caracara creightoni | Cuba and Bahamas | 700-400 BCE | Undetermined.[82] |
Large Tongan iguana | Brachylophus gibbonsi | Tonga | 650-570 BCE | Hunting.[81] |
David's imperial pigeon | Ducula david | Ouvéa Island, New Caledonia | 550-50 BCE[15] | Hunting.[54] |
Plate-toothed giant hutia | Elasmodontomys obliquus | Puerto Rico | 511-407 BCE | Undetermined.[83] |
Lena horse | Equus lenensis | Northern Siberia | 440-280 BCE (confirmed) 701-900 CE (unconfirmed) |
Hunting.[52] |
Gorilla lemur | Archaeoindris fontoynontii | Central Madagascar | 412-199 BCE[56] | Hunting.[84] |
Wild dromedary camel | Camelus dromedarius | Arabian Peninsula | 404 BCE[85] | Desertification, hunting, and capture to replenish domestic herds. Domestic and feral descendants survive.[86] |
Corsican giant shrew | Asoriculus corsicanus | Corsica, France | 348 BCE - 283 CE | Introduced black rats and human-induced habitat loss.[87] |
Sardinian pika | Prolagus sardus | Corsica and Sardinia | 348 BCE - 283 CE (confirmed)[87] 1774 CE (unconfirmed) |
Hunting, predation and competition with introduced mammals.[88] |
Hensel's field mouse | Rhagamys orthodon | Corsica and Sardinia | 348 BCE - 283 CE | Introduced black rats and human-induced habitat loss.[87] |
Tyrrhenian vole | Tyrrhenicola henseli | Corsica and Sardinia | 348 BCE - 283 CE | Introduced black rats and human-induced habitat loss.[87] |
Imperial gibbon | Junzi imperialis | Shaanxi?, China | c. 240 BCE | Possibly capture as pets and deforestation.[89] |
Maui flightless ibis | Apteribis brevis | Maui, Hawaii, United States | 170 BCE - 370 CE | Undetermined.[90] |
Ancient coua | Coua primaeva | Madagascar | 110 BCE - 130 CE | Undetermined.[56] |
Buhler's coryphomys | Coryphomys buehleri | Timor | 50 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
Timor giant rat | Coryphomys musseri | Timor | 50 BCE | Undetermined.[19] |
São Miguel scops owl | Otus frutuosoi | São Miguel Island, Azores, Portugal | 49 BCE - 125 CE | Introduced predators?[91] |
1st millennium CE
1st–5th centuries
- Ancient coin from Cyrene depicting a silphium stalk.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Eyles's harrier | Circus teauteensis | New Zealand | 1-1000 (confirmed)[92] c. 1280 (unconfirmed)[15] 1870s (dubious)[54] |
Prey loss and habitat alteration.[54] |
South Island goose | Cnemiornis calcitrans | South Island, New Zealand | 1-1000 (confirmed)[92] c. 1280 (unconfirmed)[15] |
Undetermined. |
Silphium | ?Ferula sp. | Cyrenaica coast | 54-68 | Aridification, overgrazing, and overharvesting.[93] |
Powerful goshawk | Accipiter efficax | New Caledonia | 86-428 | Undetermined.[15] |
Gracile goshawk | Accipiter quartus | New Caledonia | 86-428 | Undetermined.[15] |
Kanaka pigeon | Caloenas canacorum | New Caledonia and Tonga; Vanuatu and Fiji? | 86-428[15] | Probably hunting.[54] |
Pile-builder megapode | Megapodius molistructor | New Caledonia and Tonga | 86-428 | Undetermined.[15] |
New Caledonian ground dove | Pampusana longitarsus | New Caledonia | 86-428 | Undetermined.[15] |
New Caledonian gallinule | Porphyrio kukwiedei | New Caledonia | 86-428 (confirmed) 1860 (unconfirmed) |
Undetermined.[15] |
Giant fossa | Cryptoprocta spelaea | Madagascar | 210 | Undetermined.[94] |
Ball-headed sloth lemur | Mesopropithecus globiceps | Southwestern Madagascar | 245-429[56] | Hunting and aridification.[84] |
Atlas wild ass | Equus africanus atlanticus | North Africa | c. 300 | Undetermined. Domestic descendants survive in captivity.[95] |
Marquesas cuckoo-dove | Macropygia heana | Nuku Hiva and Ua Huka, Marquesas Islands | 300-1200 | Undetermined.[15] |
New Ireland forest rat | Rattus sanila | New Ireland, Papua New Guinea | 347-535 | Undetermined.[15] |
North African elephant | Loxodonta africana pharaoensis | Northwest Africa | 370[96] | Hunting and aridification.[97] |
Southern Malagasy giant rat | Hypogeomys australis | Central and southern Madagascar | 428-618 | Undetermined.[56] |
Jamaican monkey | Xenothrix mcgregori | Jamaica | 439-473 (confirmed) 1050 (estimated) |
Undetermined.[61] |
Oʻahu moa-nalo | Thambetochen xanion | Oahu, Hawaii, United States | 440-639 | Undetermined.[15] |
Chatham duck | Pachyanas chathamica | Chatham Islands, New Zealand | 448-657 (confirmed) c. 1350 (unconfirmed) |
Hunting?[15] |
New Caledonian horned turtle | Meiolania mackayi | New Caledonia | c. 450 | Hunting.[98] |
6th–10th centuries
- A Malagasy pygmy hippopotamus skeleton compared to a common hippopotamus skull.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cuban spectacled owl | Pulsatrix arredondoi | Cuba | 530-590 | Undetermined.[99] |
Malagasy shelduck | Alopochen sirabensis | Madagascar | 530-860[56] | Possibly hunting and aridification.[54] |
Large baboon lemur | Hadropithecus stenognathus | Central and southern Madagascar | 535-876[37] | Hunting and aridification.[84] |
Horned crocodile | Voay robustus | Madagascar | 586-670 | Possibly overexploitation of eggs for consumption, environmental changes (natural or caused by human activity), and competition with the Nile crocodile.[100] |
Monkey-like sloth lemur | Mesopropithecus pithecoides | Central Madagascar | 600-765[37] | Hunting and aridification.[84] |
Forsyth Major's baboon lemur | Archaeolemur majori | Madagascar | 650-780[56] | Hunting and aridification.[84] |
Small O'ahu crake | Porzana ziegleri | Oahu, Hawaii, United States | 650-869 | Undetermined.[15] |
Hildebrandt's elephant bird | Aepyornis hildebrandti | Central Madagascar | 664-773 727-832 (estimated) |
Deforestation.[101] |
Cayman Islands geocapromys | Geocapromys caymanensis | Cayman Islands | 666-857 | Undetermined.[102] |
Cayman Islands nesophontes | Nesophontes cingulus | Cayman Islands | 666-857 | Undetermined.[102] |
Malagasy dwarf hippopotamus | Hippopotamus lemerlei | Southwestern Madagascar[103] | 670-836 762-787 (estimated) |
Deforestation,[101] hunting, competition with, and changes to vegetation caused by livestock.[84] |
Lesser elephant bird | Mullerornis modestus | Central and southern Madagascar | 680-880[101] 826-919 (estimated) |
Hunting, aridification,[84] and deforestation.[101] |
Malagasy pygmy hippopotamus | Hippopotamus madagascariensis | Northwestern and central Madagascar[103] | 687-880 818-900 (estimated) |
Deforestation,[101] hunting, competition with, and changes to vegetation caused by livestock.[84] |
Huahine starling | Aplonis diluvialis | Huahine, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 700-1150 | Undetermined.[15] |
Huahine gull | Chroicocephalus utunui | Huahine, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 700-1150 | Undetermined.[15] |
Huahine rail | Gallirallus storrsolsoni | Huahine, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 700-1150[15] c. 1300 AD (unconfirmed) |
Possibly hunting and predation by introduced animals.[54] |
Huahine cuckoo-dove | Macropygia arevarevauupa | Huahine, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 700-1150 | Undetermined.[15] |
Huahine swamphen | Porphyrio mcnabi | Huahine, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 700-1150[15] | Possibly hunting and introduced predators.[54] |
Cuban cave rail | Nesotrochis picapicensis | Cuba | 760 | Undetermined.[99] |
Titan elephant bird | Vorombe titan | Central and southern Madagascar | 771-952 844-1011 (estimated) |
Deforestation.[101] |
Insular cave rat | Heteropsomys insulans | Puerto Rico | 772-870 | Undetermined.[83] |
Sinoto's lorikeet | Vini sinotoi | Marquesas and Society Islands, French Polynesia | 810-1025 | Hunting.[104] |
Conquered lorikeet | Vini vidivici | Marquesas, Society, and Cook Islands | 810-1025 | Hunting.[104] |
Malagasy aardvark | Plesiorycteropus madagascariensis | Central and southern Madagascar | 865-965 | Undetermined.[13] |
Grandidier's giant tortoise | Aldabrachelys grandidieri | Madagascar | c. 884[14] | Hunting and aridification.[84] |
Southern giant ruffed lemur | Pachylemur insignis | Southwestern Madagascar | 890-990[37] | Hunting and aridification.[84] |
Giant aye-aye | Daubentonia robusta | Southern Madagascar | 900-1150 | Hunting, expansion of grasses and deforestation caused by domestic cattle and goat grazing.[84] |
Giant island deer mouse | Peromyscus nesodytes | Channel Islands of California, United States | c. 950 | Possibly habitat loss through overgrazing and erosion.[105] |
Grandidier's koala lemur | Megaladapis grandidieri | Madagascar | 980-1170 | Hunting and vegetation changes caused by livestock.[84] |
2nd millennium CE
11th-12th century
- A skeleton of giant elephant bird (Aepyornis maximus) and its egg (right) compared to eggs of extant bird species.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
North Island adzebill | Aptornis otidiformis | North Island, New Zealand | c. 1000 | Hunting and predation by introduced Polynesian rats.[54] |
Henderson archaic pigeon | Bountyphaps obsoleta | Henderson Island, Pitcairn | 1000-1600 | Undetermined.[15] |
Henderson imperial pigeon | Ducula harrisoni | Henderson Island, Pitcairn | 1000-1600[15] | Probably hunting and predation by introduced animals.[54] |
Henderson ground dove | Pampusana leonpascoi | Henderson Island, Pitcairn | 1000-1600 | Undetermined.[15] |
Puerto Rican nesophontes | Nesophontes edithae | Puerto Rico | 1015-1147 | Undetermined.[83] |
Lava shearwater | Puffinus olsoni | Lanzarote and Fuerteventura, Canary Islands | 1020-1260 | Predation by introduced black rats and cats.[106] |
Giant elephant bird | Aepyornis maximus | Southern Madagascar | 1040-1380 (confirmed) 1658 (unconfirmed)[54] |
Hunting, competition with, and changes to vegetation caused by livestock.[84] |
Nēnē-nui | Branta hylobadistes | Oahu, Hawaii, United States | 1046-1380[15] | Probably hunting or introduced predators.[54] |
Edwards' baboon lemur | Archaeolemur edwardsi | Central Madagascar[107] | 1047-1280[56] | Hunting and changes to vegetation caused by livestock.[84] |
Maui Nui moa-nalo | Thambetochen chauliodous | Molokai and Maui, Hawaii, United States | 1057-1375 | Undetermined.[15] |
Maui stilt-owl | Grallistrix erdmani | Maui, Hawaii, United States | 1057-1440 | Undetermined.[15] |
New Zealand swan | Cygnus sumnerensis/chathamicus | New Zealand? and the Chatham Islands | 1059-1401 | Hunting.[15] It was suggested that the material from the main islands is conspecific with the extant black swan, while that from the Chathams represents a truly different, extinct species.[54] |
Tenerife giant rat | Canariomys bravoi | Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain | 1100-1300 | Hunting.[108] |
Abaco tortoise | Chelonoidis alburyorum | Abaco Islands, Bahamas | c. 1170 | Undetermined.[14] |
Barbuda giant rice rat | Megalomys audreyae | Barbuda | 1173-1385 | Undetermined.[15] |
Atalaye nesophontes | Nesophontes hypomicrus | Hispaniola | 1175-1295 | Undetermined.[109] |
New Zealand owlet-nightjar | Aegotheles novaezealandiae | New Zealand | 1183 | Predation by introduced Polynesian rats.[110] |
13th-14th century
- Skeleton of Edwards' koala lemur.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Abrupt giant tortoise | Aldabrachelys abrupta | Madagascar | c. 1200[14] | Hunting and aridification.[84] |
Ua Huka booby | Papasula abbotti costelloi | Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia | c. 1200 | Hunting and possibly also deforestation.[54] |
Chatham kaka | Nestor chathamensis | Chatham Islands, New Zealand | 1200-1600 | Probably hunting, deforestation, and predation by introduced Polynesian rats.[54] |
Common koala lemur | Megaladapis madagascariensis | Madagascar | 1206-1427[37] | Hunting.[84] |
South Island adzebill | Aptornis defossor | South Island, New Zealand | 1234-1445[92] | Hunting and predation by introduced Polynesian rats.[54] |
St. Michel nesophontes | Nesophontes paramicrus | Hispaniola | 1265-1400 | Undetermined.[109] |
Lava mouse | Malpaisomys insularis | Lanzarote and Fuerteventura, Canary Islands | 1270 | Possibly disease spread by introduced rats.[111] |
Mantell's moa | Pachyornis geranoides | North Island, New Zealand | 1278-1415 | Hunting.[15] |
North Island giant moa | Dinornis novaezelandiae | North Island, New Zealand | 1286-1390 | Hunting.[112] |
Chinese gharial | Hanyusuchus sinensis | South China and Hainan | 1292-1630 | Extermination campaign.[113] |
Heavy-footed moa | Pachyornis elephantopus | Eastern South Island, New Zealand | 1294-1438 | Hunting.[114] |
Western Cuban nesophontes | Nesophontes micrus | Cuba | 1295-1430 | Undetermined.[109] |
Haitian nesophontes | Nesophontes zamicrus | Hispaniola | 1295-1430 | Undetermined.[15] |
Tabuai rail | Hypotaenidia steadmani | Tabuai, Austral Islands, French Polynesia | c. 1300 | Undetermined.[54] |
Chatham penguin | Eudyptes warhami | New Zealand | After 1300 1872 (unconfirmed)[54] |
Hunting.[115] |
Dwarf yellow-eyed penguin | Megadyptes antipodes richdalei | New Zealand | After 1300 | Hunting.[115] |
Upland moa | Megalapteryx didinus | South Island, New Zealand | 1300-1422 | Hunting.[114] |
Edwards' koala lemur | Megaladapis edwardsi | Madagascar | 1300-1430 | Hunting and vegetation changes caused by livestock.[84] |
Eua rail | Hypotaenidia vekamatolu | Eua, Tonga | 1300-1800 | Undetermined.[54] |
Bush moa | Anomalopteryx didiformis | New Zealand | 1310-1420 | Hunting.[114] |
Eastern moa | Emeus crassus | South Island, New Zealand | 1320-1350 | Hunting.[116] |
Haast's eagle | Hieraaetus moorei | South Island, New Zealand | 1320-1350 (confirmed)[116] 1870s (dubious) |
Deforestation and loss of prey. Possibly also predation of nests by introduced pigs and rats.[54] |
Southern sloth lemur | Palaeopropithecus ingens | Southwestern Madagascar | 1320-1630 | Hunting and vegetation changes caused by livestock.[84] |
Hispaniola woodcock | Scolopax brachycarpa | Hispaniola | 1320-1380 | Undetermined.[117] |
Waitaha penguin | Megadyptes waitaha | Coastal South Island, New Zealand | 1347-1529 | Hunting.[118] |
Scarlett's shearwater | Puffinus spelaeus | Western South Island, New Zealand | 1350 | Predation by Polynesian rats.[106] |
Giant Hawaii goose | Branta rhuax | Hawai'i, Hawaii, United States | 1380-1500[119] | Probably hunting.[54] |
Great ground dove | Pampusana nui | French Polynesia and Cook Islands | 1390-1470 | Undetermined.[15] |
Crested moa | Pachyornis australis | Subalpine South Island, New Zealand | 1396-1442 | Hunting.[114] |
15th-16th century
- Skeletal mounts of various moa species (1868).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pico rail | Rallus montivagorum | Pico Island, Açores, Portugal | 1400-1450 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Tenerife giant lizard | Gallotia goliath | Tenerife and La Palma, Canary Islands | 1400-1500 | Hunting.[108] | |
Kauaʻi finch | Telespiza persecutrix | Kaua'i and Oahu, Hawaii, United States | 1425-1660 | Undetermined.[15] | |
South Island giant moa | Dinornis robustus | South Island, New Zealand | 1451-1952[114] (1558-1728)[120] |
Hunting.[114] | |
South American wolf | Dusicyon avus | Southern Cone | 1454-1626 | Possibly climate change, hunting, and competition with domestic dogs.[121] | |
Dwarf thick-knee | Burhinus nanus | Bahamas | 1460-1660 | Undetermined.[122] | |
Broad-billed moa | Euryapteryx curtus | North, South, and Stewart Island of New Zealand | 1464-1637[114] (1542-1618)[123] |
Hunting.[114] | |
Finsch's duck | Chenonetta finschi | New Zealand | 1500-1600 | 2014 (IUCN) | Hunting and predation by introduced Polynesian rats.[124] |
Olson's petrel | Bulweria bifax | Saint Helena | 1502 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting and introduced predators?[125] |
Saint Helena rail | Laterallus podarces | Saint Helena | 1502 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably hunting and introduced predators.[126] |
Saint Helena petrel | Pterodroma rupinarum | Saint Helena | 1502 | Probably deforestation and introduced mammals.[54] | |
Saint Helena hoopoe | Upupa antaios | Saint Helena | 1502 (confirmed) c. 1640 (unconfirmed)[54] |
1988 (IUCN) | Possibly hunting and introduced predators.[127] |
Saint Helena crake | Zapornia astrictocarpus | Saint Helena | 1502 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably introduced predators.[128] |
Vespucci's giant rat | Noronhomys vespucii | Fernando de Noronha Island, Brazil | 1503 | 2008 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[129] |
Galápagos giant rat | Megaoryzomys curioi | Santa Cruz, Galápagos Islands, Ecuador | 1520-1950[15] | 2008 (IUCN) | Possibly introduced predators.[130] |
Puerto Rican hutia | Isolobodon portoricensis | Hispaniola and Gonâve; Introduced to Puerto Rico, Mona, and U.S. Virgin Islands |
1525 (confirmed) c. 1800 (unconfirmed) |
1994-2008 (IUCN) | Possibly predation by introduced black rats.[131] |
Cayman Islands hutia | Capromys sp. | Cayman Islands | 1525-1625[6] c. 1700 (estimated)[102] |
Possibly hunting, introduced predators, and habitat loss caused by introduced ungulates.[102] | |
Hispaniolan edible rat | Brotomys voratus | Hispaniola | 1550-1670[6] | 1994 (IUCN) | Introduced rats.[132] |
Ascension night heron | Nycticorax olsoni | Ascension Island | 1555 | Probably predation by introduced cats and rats.[54] |
17th century
- Depiction of a live dodo by Ustad Mansur, c. 1625.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hodgens's waterhen | Tribonyx hodgenorum | New Zealand | 1600-1700 | 2014 (IUCN) | Hunting and predation by Polynesian rats.[133] |
Rodrigues blue pigeon | Alectroenas payandeei | Rodrigues | c. 1601 | Possibly predation by introduced rats.[54] | |
Mauritius white-throated rail | Dryolimnas sp. | Mauritius | 1602 | 1638 | Hunting and predation by introduced mammals.[54] |
Bermuda hawk | Bermuteo avivorus | Bermuda | 1603 | 2014 (IUCN) | Possibly hunting and predation by introduced feral pigs and other animals.[134] |
Bermuda saw-whet owl | Aegolius gradyi | Bermuda | 1609-1610 | 1623 2014 (IUCN)[135] |
Habitat destruction and introduced predators.[54] |
Bermuda towhee | Piplio naufragus | Bermuda | 1609-1610 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Bermuda night heron | Nyctanassa carcinocatactes | Bermuda | 1610 | 2014 (IUCN) | Possibly hunting and introduced predators.[136] |
Réunion blue pigeon | Alectroenas sp. | Réunion | 1619 | 1704 | Probably hunting and predation by introduced cats.[54] |
Bermuda flicker | Colaptes oceanicus | Bermuda | 1623 | Probably predation by introduced cats.[54] | |
Eurasian aurochs | Bos primigenius primigenius | Mid-latitude Eurasia | 1627 (confirmed) 1650-1750 (unconfirmed)[137] |
2008 (IUCN) | Hunting, competition with, and diseases from domestic cattle. Domestic descendants survive worldwide, including feral populations.[138] There are several ongoing projects to re-breed wild-type aurochs and release them into the wild. |
Ascension crake | Mundia elpenor | Ascension Island | 1656 | 1988 (IUCN) | Possibly introduction of rats and cats, although it is not attested by the time they arrived in the 18th and 19th centuries.[139] |
Dodo | Raphus cucullatus | Mauritius | 1662 (confirmed) 1688 (unconfirmed)[140] |
1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[141] |
Larger Malagasy hippopotamus | Hippopotamus laloumena | Eastern Madagascar | 1670-1950 (confirmed)[56] 1976 (unconfirmed) |
Increased human and cattle pressure after the introduction of prickly pear farming.[84] Its specific separation from the common hippopotamus has been questioned.[142] | |
Réunion sheldgoose | Alopochen kervazoi | Réunion | 1671-1672 | 1710 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting and habitat destruction.[143] |
Réunion kestrel | Falco duboisi | Réunion | 1671-1672 | 2004 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[144] |
Réunion fody | Foudia delloni | Réunion | c. 1672 | 2016 (IUCN) | Probably predation by introduced rats.[145] |
Broad-billed parrot | Lophopsittacus mauritianus | Mauritius | 1673-1675 | 1693 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting.[146] |
Réunion rail | Dryolimnas augusti | Réunion | 1674 | 2014 (IUCN) | Probably hunting and introduced rats and cats.[147] |
Réunion pigeon | Nesoenas duboisi | Réunion | 1674 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably introduced rats and cats.[148] |
Réunion night heron | Nycticorax duboisi | Réunion | 1674 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[149] |
Giant vampire bat | Desmodus draculae | Eastern South America; Central America (Pleistocene)[150] |
1675-1755 | Undetermined.[151] | |
Mauritius sheldgoose | Alopochen mauritiana | Mauritius | 1693 | 1698 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting.[152] |
Red rail | Aphanapteryx bonasia | Mauritius | 1693 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting and predation by introduced cats.[153] |
Mascarene coot | Fulica newtonii | Mauritius and Réunion | 1672 (Réunion) 1693 (Mauritius) |
1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[154] |
Mauritius night heron | Nycticorax mauritianus | Mauritius | 1693 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably hunting.[155] |
Mascarene teal | Anas theodori | Mauritius; Réunion? | 1696 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[156] |
1700s-1750s
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Imber's petrel | Pterodroma imberi | Chatham Islands, New Zealand | 1700-1800 | Hunting and predation by introduced cats.[54] | |
Mascarene reed cormorant | Phalacrocorax africanus nanus | Mauritius and Réunion | 1705 | Probably hunting and predation by introduced cats.[54] | |
Guadeloupe parakeet | Psittacara labati | Guadeloupe | 1724 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably hunting.[157] |
Rodrigues petrel | Pterodroma sp. | Rodrigues | 1725-1726 | Predation by introduced cats and rats.[54] | |
Rodrigues rail | Erythromachus leguati | Rodrigues | 1726 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[158] |
Rodrigues owl | Mascarenotus murivorus | Rodrigues | 1726 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably hunting, deforestation, and predation by introduced animals.[159] |
Rodrigues starling | Necropsar rodericanus | Rodrigues | 1726 | 1761 1988 (IUCN) |
Undetermined.[160] |
Rodrigues pigeon | Nesoenas rodericanus | Rodrigues | 1726 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably predation by introduced black rats.[161] |
Rodrigues night heron | Nycticorax megacephalus | Rodrigues | 1726 | 1761 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting.[162] |
Mauritius wood pigeon | Columba thiriouxi | Mauritius | c. 1730 | Hunting, predation by introduced black rats, and deforestation.[54] | |
Mauritius turtle dove | Nesoenas cicur | Mauritius | c. 1730 | Hunting, predation by introduced mammals, and deforestation.[54] | |
Réunion swamphen | Porphyrio caerulescens | Réunion | c. 1730 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[163] |
Saddle-backed Mauritius giant tortoise | Cylindraspis inepta | Mauritius | c. 1735[14] (confirmed) 1844[164] (unconfirmed) |
1994 (IUCN) | Possibly hunting and introduced predators and competitors.[165] |
Domed Mauritius giant tortoise | Cylindraspis triserrata | Mauritius | c. 1735[14] (confirmed) 1844[164] (unconfirmed) |
1994 (IUCN) | Possibly hunting and introduced predators and competitors.[166] |
Corynanthe brachythyrsus | Cameroon | 1746 | 1998 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[167] |
1760s-1790s
- Drawing of Steller's sea cow by Sven Larsson Waxell (1742).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Atlantic gray whale | Eschrichtius robustus | North Atlantic and the Mediterranean | 550 (Europe) 1760 (North America) |
Whaling. The same species survives in the Pacific Ocean.[168] | |
Rodrigues parrot | Necropsittacus rodricanus | Rodrigues | 1761 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[169] |
Rodrigues solitaire | Pezophaps solitaria | Rodrigues | 1761 | 1778 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting and predation by introduced cats.[170] |
Steller's sea cow | Hydrodamalis gigas | Bering Sea; Northern Pacific coasts from Japan to Baja California (Pleistocene) | 1762-1763 | 1768 1986 (IUCN) |
Hunting and reduction of kelp as a result of sea otter hunting, which caused proliferation of kelp-eating sea urchins.[171] |
Réunion ibis | Threskiornis solitarius | Réunion | 1763 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[172] |
Mauritius grey parrot | Lophopsittacus bensoni | Mauritius and Réunion | 1764 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[173] |
Seychelles purple swamphen | Porphyrio sp. | Mahé, Seychelles | 1770 | Hunting.[54] | |
Raiatea parakeet | Cyanoramphus ulietanus | Raiatea, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1773 | 1988 (IUCN) | Possibly deforestation, hunting, and predation by introduced species.[174] |
Tanna ground dove | Alopecoenas ferrugineus | Tanna, Vanuatu | 1774 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting?[175] |
Raiatea starling | ?Aplonis ulietensis | Raiatea, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1774 | 1850 2016 (IUCN) |
Possibly predation by introduced rats.[176] |
Tongatapu rail | Hypotaenidia hypoleucus | Tongatapu, Tonga | 1777 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Moorea sandpiper | Prosobonia ellisi | Moorea, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1777 | 1988 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced rats.[177] |
Tahiti sandpiper | Prosobonia leucoptera | Tahiti, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1777 | 1988 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced rats.[178] |
Martinique amazon | Amazona martinicana | Martinique | 1779 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably hunting.[179] |
Guadeloupe amazon | Amazona violacea | Guadeloupe | 1779 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[180] |
Tahiti crake | Zapornia nigra | Tahiti, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1784 | 1988 (IUCN) | Possibly introduced predators.[181] |
White swamphen | Porphyrio albus | Lord Howe Island, Australia | 1790 | 1834 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting.[182] |
Amsterdam wigeon | Mareca marecula | Amsterdam Island, French Southern and Antarctic Lands | 1793 | 1874 | Hunting and predation by introduced rats.[54] |
Oceanic eclectus parrot | Eclectus infectus | Tonga and Vanuatu; Fiji? | 1793 | 2014 (IUCN) | Probably hunting and predation by introduced mammals.[183] |
Vava'u rail | Hypotaenidia sp. | Vava'u, Tonga | 1793 | Possibly habitat destruction and introduced predators.[54] | |
Bluebuck | Hippotragus leucophaeus | Overberg; South Africa (Pleistocene) |
1799-1800 | 1986 (IUCN)[184] | Vegetation change and disruption of migration routes after the Last Glacial Period, competition with domestic cattle, overhunting, and further habitat loss due to agriculture.[24] |
1800s-1820s
- Drawing of a spotted green pigeon by John Latham (1823).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Domed Rodrigues giant tortoise | Cylindraspis peltastes | Rodrigues | c. 1800[14] | 1994 (IUCN) | Possibly hunting and introduced predators and competitors.[185] |
Saddle-backed Rodrigues giant tortoise | Cylindraspis vosmaeri | Rodrigues | c. 1800[14] | 1994 (IUCN) | Possibly hunting and introduced predators and competitors.[186] |
King Island emu | Dromaius minor | King Island, Australia | 1802 | 1805 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting.[187] |
Smooth handfish | Sympterichthys unipennis | Southeastern Tasmania? | 1802 | 2020 (IUCN) | Fishing?[188] |
Wynberg conebush | Leucadendron grandiflorum | Cape Peninsula, South Africa | 1806 | 2020 (IUCN) | Probably habitat destruction.[189] |
St. Paul Island duck | Mareca sp. | Île Saint-Paul, French Southern and Antarctic Lands | 1807 | Hunting.[54] | |
Spotted green pigeon | Caloenas maculata | Tahiti, French Polynesia? | 1823 (confirmed) 1928 (unconfirmed) |
2008 (IUCN) | Hunting?[190] |
Madeira finch | Goniaphea leucocephala | Madeira, Portugal | 1823 | 1853 | Undetermined.[54] |
Maupiti monarch | Pomarea pomarea | Maupiti, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1823 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably introduced species.[191] |
Mysterious starling | Aplonis mavornata | Mauke, Cook Islands | 1825 | 1988 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced brown rats.[192] |
ʻĀmaui | Myadestes woahensis | Oahu, Hawaii, United States | 1825 | 1988 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat destruction and introduced avian malaria.[193] |
Mauritius blue pigeon | Alectroenas nitidissimus | Mauritius | 1826 (confirmed) 1837 (unconfirmed)[194] |
1988 (IUCN) | Hunting and deforestation.[195] |
Kosrae crake | Zapornia monasa | Kosrae, Micronesia | 1827-1828 | 1988 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced rats.[196] |
Kosrae starling | Aplonis corvina | Kosrae, Micronesia | 1828 | 1880 1988 (IUCN) |
Probably predation by introduced rats.[197] |
Bonin grosbeak | Carpodacus ferreorostris | Bonin Islands, Japan | 1828 (confirmed) 1890 (unconfirmed) |
1854 1988 (IUCN) |
Possibly deforestation and predation by introduced cats and rats.[198] |
Bonin thrush | Zoothera terrestris | Bonin Islands, Japan | 1828 | 1889 1988 (IUCN) |
Probably predation by introduced cats and rats.[199] |
Tonga ground skink | Tachygyia microlepis | Tonga | c. 1829[200] | 1996 (IUCN) | Habitat loss and predation by introduced dogs, pigs, and rats.[201] |
1830s-1840s
- Only drawing of a live hoopoe starling, by Paul Jossigny (c. 1770).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kangaroo Island emu | Dromaius baudinianus | Kangaroo Island, Australia | 1830-1836[54] | 1837 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting.[202] |
Mascarene booby | Papasula sp. | Mauritius and Rodrigues | 1832 | Probably hunting and deforestation.[54] | |
Delalande's coua | Coua delalandei | Nosy Boraha, Madagascar | 1834 | 1994 (IUCN) | Deforestation.[203] |
Mascarene parrot | Mascarinus mascarin | Réunion | 1775 (wild) 1834 (captive) |
1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[204] |
Atlas bear | Ursus arctos crowtheri | Northern Maghreb | 1834[205] | Possibly habitat fragmentation.[205] Two haplotypes are found in remains from the Vandal and Byzantine periods: one shared with Iberian bears that could have been introduced by humans, and another unique to Africa.[206] It is not known which type survived until more recent times. | |
Darwin's large ground finch | Geospiza magnirostris magnirostris | Floreana and San Cristóbal, Galápagos Islands | 1835 | 1838 | Habitat destruction and introduced predators.[54] |
Oʻahu ʻakialoa | Akialoa ellisiana | Oahu, Hawaii, United States | 1837 (confirmed) 1940 (unconfirmed) |
2016 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat destruction and introduced disease.[207] |
Hoopoe starling | Fregilupus varius | Réunion | 1837 (confirmed) 1850-1860 (unconfirmed) |
1988 (IUCN) | Possibly introduced disease, hunting, and habitat degradation.[208] |
Oʻahu ʻōʻō | Moho apicalis | Oahu, Hawaii, United States | 1837 (confirmed) 1840 (unconfirmed) |
1890s[54] 1988 (IUCN) |
Habitat loss and introduction of disease-carrying mosquitos.[209] |
Mauritius owl | Mascarenotus sauzieri | Mauritius | 1837 | 1859 1988 (IUCN) |
Possibly deforestation, hunting, and predation by introduced mammals.[210] |
Oʻahu nukupuʻu | Hemignathus lucidus | Oahu, Hawaii, United States | 1838-1841 (confirmed) 1860 (unconfirmed) |
1890 | Undetermined.[211] |
Réunion slit-eared skink | Gongylomorphus borbonicus | Réunion | 1839 | Probably predation by introduced snakes.[164] | |
Large Samoan flying fox | Pteropus coxi | Samoan Islands | 1839-1841 | 2020 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[212] |
Réunion giant tortoise | Cylindraspis indica | Réunion | c. 1840[14] | 1994 (IUCN)[213] | Undetermined. |
Dieffenbach's Rail | Hypotaenidia dieffenbachii | Chatham Islands, New Zealand | 1840 | 1872 1988 (IUCN) |
Possibly introduced predators and habitat loss from fire.[214] |
Spectacled cormorant | Phalacrocorax perspicillatus | Commander Islands, Russia; Northeast Japan (Pleistocene)[215] | 1840-1850 (confirmed) c. 1852 (unconfirmed) |
1882 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting.[216][54] |
Rodrigues giant day gecko | Phelsuma gigas | Rodrigues | 1842 | 1874 | Possibly introduced Norway rats.[164] |
Black-fronted parakeet | Cyanorhamphus zealandicus | Tahiti, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1844 | 1988 (IUCN) | Possibly deforestation, hunting, and predation by introduced species.[217] |
Tasmanian emu | Dromaius novaehollandiae diemenensis | Tasmania, Australia | 1845 (wild, confirmed) 1851 (wild, unconfirmed) 1873 (captive, unconfirmed) |
Hunting.[54] |
1850s
- Painting of great auks by John James Audubon (1827-1838).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Daudin's giant tortoise | Aldabrachelys gigantea daudinii | Mahé, Seychelles | c. 1850 | Undetermined.[14] | |
Floreana giant tortoise | Chelonoidis niger | Floreana, Galápagos Islands, Ecuador | c. 1850[14] | 1996 (IUCN) | Probably hunting and introduced species. Hybrid descendants of C. niger and C. becki survive in nearby Isabela Island.[218] |
Southern black rhinoceros | Diceros bicornis bicornis | Southwestern Africa | c. 1850 | Undetermined.[219] | |
Christmas sandpiper | Prosobonia cancellata | Kiritimati, Kiribati | c. 1850 | 2014 (IUCN) | Probably predation by introduced cats and rats.[220] |
Turquoise-throated puffleg | Eriocnemis godini | Northern Ecuador | 1850 (confirmed) 1976 (unconfirmed) |
Habitat destruction.[221] | |
String tree | Acalypha rubrinervis | Central ridge of St Helena island | 1850-1875 (captive) | 1998 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[222] |
Belido | Chitala lopis | Northwestern Java, Indonesia | 1851 | 2020 (IUCN) | Overfishing, pollution, and habitat destruction for agriculture and urban development.[223] |
Norfolk kaka | Nestor productus | Norfolk Island, Australia | 1825-1854 (wild)[54] 1851 (captive) |
1988 (IUCN) | Hunting[224] and habitat destruction by introduced rabbits, pigs, and goats.[54] |
Great auk | Pinguinus impennis | North Atlantic and western Mediterranean | 1852 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting.[225] |
Lord Howe pigeon | Columba vitiensis godmanae | Lord Howe Island, Australia | 1853 | Hunting.[54] | |
Small Samoan flying fox | Pteropus allenorum | Upolu, Samoa | 1856 | 2020 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[226] |
Gould's mouse | Pseudomys gouldii | Southern Australia | 1856-1857 | 1990 (IUCN) | Possibly predation by feral cats, habitat degradation by livestock, and changed fire regime.[227] A 2021 genetic analysis suggests that Gould's mouse is actually conspecific with the Shark Bay mouse that survives on four islands off the coast of Western Australia.[228] |
Kioea | Chaetoptila angustipluma | Hawaii, United States | 1859 | 1988 (IUCN) | Possibly deforestation, hunting, and introduced predators.[229] |
1860s
- Watercolor painting of a Cuban macaw by Jacques Barraband (c. 1800).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sea mink | Neovison macrodon | Atlantic coast of Canada and New England | c. 1860 (confirmed) 1894 (unconfirmed) |
2002 (IUCN) | Hunting for the fur trade.[230] |
Pseudoyersinia brevipennis | Hyères, France | 1860 | 2020 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[231] | |
Gould's emerald | Riccordia elegans | Jamaica? | 1860 | 1988 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[232] |
Jamaican poorwill | Siphonorhis americana | Jamaica | 1860 | Predation by introduced black rats, brown rats, and small Indian mongooses.[233] | |
Small Mauritian flying fox | Pteropus subniger | Mauritius and Réunion | 1862 (confirmed) 1864-1873 (unconfirmed) |
1988 (IUCN) | Hunting and deforestation.[234] |
Cuban macaw | Ara tricolor | Cuba and Juventud | 1864 (confirmed) 1885 (unconfirmed) |
2000 (IUCN) | Hunting for food and the exotic pet trade.[235] |
Cape lion | Panthera leo melanochaita | Cape Province, South Africa | 1865 | Extermination campaign.[236] Genetics do not support subspecific differentiation between the Cape lion and living lions in Eastern Africa; if placed in a single subspecies, it would be P. l. melanochaita because of being the older name.[237] | |
Eastern elk | Cervus canadensis canadensis | Eastern North America | 1867[238] | 1880[239] | Hunting. It's been argued (based on genetic data) that most or all elk subspecies in North America are actually the same, which would be C. c. canadensis due to being named first.[240][241] |
Kawaihae hibiscadelphus | Hibiscadelphus bombycinus | Kawaihae, Hawaii, United States[242] | 1868[243] | Undetermined. | |
Huahine warbler | Acrocephalus musae garretti | Huahine, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1869 | 1921 | Possibly predation by introduced rats.[54] |
1870s
- A drawing of a Falkland Islands wolf published in The Illustrated London News (1873).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
North Island snipe | Coenocorypha barrierensis | North Island, New Zealand | 1870 | 2014 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced Polynesian rats and feral cats.[244] |
Raiatea warbler | Acrocephalus musae musae | Raiatea, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1870-1873 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Spined dwarf mantis | Ameles fasciipennis | Tolentino, Italy | 1871 | 2020 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat loss to agriculture.[245] |
Cape warthog | Phacochoerus aethiopicus aethiopicus | Cape Province, South Africa | 1871 | Undetermined.[246] | |
Tristan moorhen | Gallinula nesiotis | Tristan da Cunha | 1873[54] | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting, predation by introduced cats, rats, and pigs; and habitat destruction by fire.[247] |
Samoan woodhen | Pareudiastes pacificus | Savai'i, Samoa | 1873 (confirmed) 2003 (unconfirmed) |
Hunting and predation by introduced cats, rats, pigs, and dogs.[248] | |
Large Palau flying fox | Pteropus pilosus | Palau | Before 1874 | 1988 (IUCN) | Possibly hunting and habitat degradation.[249] |
Coues's gadwall | Mareca strepera couesi | Teraina, Line Islands, Kiribati | 1874 | 1924 | Probably hunting and introduced predators.[54] |
Percy Island flying fox | Pteropus brunneus | Percy Islands, Australia | 1874 | 1996 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat loss.[250] |
Newton's parakeet | Alexandrinus exsul | Rodrigues, Mascarene Islands | 1875 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably habitat loss and hunting. The last pairs may have been killed by the 1876 cyclone season.[251] |
North Island little spotted kiwi | Apteryx owenii iredalei | North Island, New Zealand | 1875 | Hunting, habitat degradation, and predation by introduced mammals.[54] | |
Labrador duck | Camptorhynchus labradorius | Atlantic coast of Canada and New England | 1875 (confirmed) 1878 (unconfirmed)[252] |
1988 (IUCN) | Hunting, egg harvesting, and habitat loss.[253] |
New Zealand quail | Coturnix novaezelandiae | New Zealand | 1875 | 1988 (IUCN) | Introduced diseases?[254] |
Broad-faced potoroo | Potorous platyops | Western Australia | 1875 | 1982 (IUCN) | Predation by feral cats and habitat loss.[255] |
Falkland Islands wolf | Dusicyon australis | Falkland Islands | 1876 | 1986 (IUCN) | Extermination campaign.[256] |
Kermadec megapode | Megapodius sp. | Raoul, Kermadec Islands, New Zealand | 1876 | Volcanic eruption.[54] | |
Himalayan quail | Ophrysia superciliosa | Uttarakhand, India | 1876 (confirmed) 2010 (unconfirmed) |
Hunting and habitat loss.[257] | |
Brace's emerald | Riccordia bracei | New Providence, Bahamas | 1877 | 1988 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[258] |
Jamaican rice rat | Oryzomys antillarum | Jamaica | 1877 | 2008 (IUCN) | Competition with introduced rats,[61] or predation by introduced mongooses.[259] |
Navassa Island iguana | Cyclura cornuta onchiopsis | Navassa Island | 1878 | 2011 (IUCN) | Probably hunting.[260] |
Antioquia brown-banded antpitta | Grallaria milleri gilesi | Santa Elena, Antioquia, Colombia | 1878 | Probably deforestation.[54] | |
Macquarie Island banded rail | Hypotaenidia philippensis macquariensis | South Macquarie Island, Australia | 1879 | 1894 | Predation by introduced cats, rats, weka, and overgrazing by introduced rabbits.[54] |
Jamaican petrel | Pterodroma caribbaea | Jamaica; Dominica and Guadeloupe? | 1879 1936 (unconfirmed)[54] |
Hunting and predation by introduced rats, mongooses, pigs, and dogs.[261] |
1880s
- Only quagga photographed alive, at London Zoo in 1870.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Parras characodon | Characodon garmani | Southern Coahuila, Mexico | 1880-1889?[262] | 1953[263] 1988 (IUCN) |
Probably habitat loss.[262] |
Saint Lucia giant rice rat | Megalomys luciae | Saint Lucia | c. 1881 | 1994 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced mongooses.[264] |
Jamaican wood rail | Amaurolimnas concolor concolor | Jamaica | 1881 | Possibly predation by introduced mongooses, cats, and rats.[54] | |
Quagga | Equus quagga quagga | Cape Province, South Africa | 1860-1865 (wild)[265] 1883 (captive) |
1889[265] 1986 (IUCN)[266] |
Hunting. |
Hawaiian rail | Zapornia sandwichensis | Eastern Hawai'i (and Molokai?), United States | 1884 | 1988 (IUCN) | Possibly hunting and predation by introduced rats, cats, and dogs.[267] |
Martinique house wren | Troglodytes aedon martinicensis | Martinique | 1886 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Bennett's seaweed | Vanvoorstia bennettiana | Sydney Harbor, Australia | 1886 | 2003 (IUCN) | Habitat loss and pollution.[268] |
Hokkaido wolf | Canis lupus hattai | Hokkaido, Japan | c. 1889 | Extermination campaign.[269] | |
Bonin wood pigeon | Columba versicolor | Bonin Islands, Japan | 1889 | 1988 (IUCN) | Deforestation and predation by introduced cats and rats.[270] |
Whiteline topminnow | Fundulus albolineatus | Huntsville, Alabama, United States | 1889 | Habitat destruction.[262] | |
Eastern hare-wallaby | Lagorchestes leporides | Interior southeastern Australia | 1889[271] | 1982 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat loss due to livestock grazing and wildfires.[272] |
Bonin nankeen night heron | Nycticorax caledonicus crassirostris | Chichi-jima and Nakōdo-jima, Bonin Islands, Japan | 1889 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Sturdee's pipistrelle | Pipistrellus sturdeei | Haha-jima, Bonin Islands, Japan | 1889 | 1994 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[273] |
1890s
- Kauaʻi nukupuʻu by J. G. Keulemans (1893-1900).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Portuguese ibex | Capra pyrenaica lusitanica | Portuguese-Galician border | c. 1890[274] | Hunting. | |
New Caledonian rail | Cabalus lafresnayanus | New Caledonia | 1890 (confirmed) 1984 (unconfirmed) |
Probably predation by introduced dogs, cats, pigs, and rats.[275] | |
Macquarie parakeet | Cyanoramphus erythrotis | Macquarie Island, Australia | 1890 (confirmed) 1891 (unconfirmed) |
1894 | Increased predation by introduced cats and weka after rabbits were introduced, boosting their numbers.[276] |
Kauaʻi nukupuʻu | Hemignathus hanapepe | Kaua'i, Hawaii, United States | 1890 (confirmed)[277] 2007 (unconfirmed) |
Undetermined. | |
New Zealand bittern | Ixobrychus novaezelandiae | New Zealand | 1890-1899 | 1988 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[278] |
Sulu bleeding-heart | Gallicolumba menagei | Tawi-tawi, Sulu archipelago, Philippines | 1891 (confirmed) 1995 (unconfirmed) |
Possibly deforestation and hunting.[54] | |
Raoul Island banded rail | Hypotaenidia sp. | Raoul, Kermadec Islands, New Zealand | 1891 | 1944 | Predation by introduced cats or rats.[54] |
Lesser koa finch | Rhodacanthis flaviceps | Hawai'i Island, Hawaii, United States | 1891 | 1893 1988 (IUCN) |
Undetermined.[279] |
Maui Nui ʻakialoa | Akialoa lanaiensis | Lana'i, Hawaii, United States | 1892 | 2016 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat destruction and introduced disease.[280] |
ʻUla-ʻai-hawane | Ciridops anna | Hawai'i Island, Hawaii, United States | 1892 (confirmed) 1937 (unconfirmed) |
1988 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[281] |
Nendo tube-nosed fruit bat | Nyctimene sanctacrucis | Santa Cruz Islands, Solomon Islands | 1892 (confirmed) 1907 (unconfirmed) |
1994 (IUCN) | Undetermined. Could be conspecific with the Island tube-nosed fruit bat.[282] |
St. Vincent pygmy rice rat | Oligoryzomys victus | St. Vincent | 1892 | 2008 (IUCN) | Probably predation by introduced brown rats, black rats, and mongooses.[283] |
Chatham fernbird | Poodytes rufescens | Chatham Islands, New Zealand | 1892 | 1988 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat loss and predation by introduced cats.[284] |
Puerto Rican parakeet | Psittacara maugei | Puerto Rico and Mona Island | 1892 | Possibly deforestation, hunting, and disease.[54] | |
Marianne white-eye | Zosterops semiflavus | Marianne Island, Seychelles | 1892 | 1940 | Deforestation, competition with introduced birds and predation by back rats.[54] |
Chatham rail | Cabalus modestus | Chatham Islands, New Zealand | 1893-1895 | 1988 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction, predation and competition with introduced mammals.[285] |
Harelip sucker | Lagochila lacera | Southeastern United States | 1893 | Possibly water siltation and pollution.[262] | |
Seychelles parakeet | Psittacula wardi | Seychelles | 1893 | 1906 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting and habitat loss to agriculture.[286] |
Kona grosbeak | Chloridops kona | Lana'i, Hawaii, United States | 1894 | 1988 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[287] |
North Island takahē | Porhyrio mantelli | North Island, New Zealand | 1894 | 2000 (IUCN) | Climate-induced reduction of grasslands and hunting.[288] |
Hawkins's rail | Diaphorapteryx hawkinsi | Chatham Islands, New Zealand | 1895 | 2005 (IUCN) | Hunting.[289] |
Lyall's wren | Traversia lyalli | New Zealand | 1895 | 1895 1988 (IUCN) |
Habitat loss and predation by introduced cats.[290] |
Greater koa finch | Rhodacanthis palmeri | Hawai'i Island, Hawaii, United States | 1896 | 1906 1988 (IUCN) |
Possibly habitat destruction and introduced avian malaria.[291] |
Newfoundland wolf | Canis lupus beothucus | Newfoundland, Canada | 1896 (confirmed)[292] 1911 (unconfirmed) |
Hunting. | |
Martinique giant rice rat | Megalomys desmarestii | Martinique | 1897 (confirmed) 1902 (unconfirmed) |
1994 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced mongooses.[293] |
Nelson's rice rat | Oryzomys nelsoni | Central María Madre Island, Mexico | 1897 | 1996 (IUCN) | Competition with introduced black rats.[294] |
Guadalupe towhee | Piplio maculatus consobrinus | Guadalupe Island, Mexico | 1897 | 1954 | Habitat destruction by introduced goats and predation by cats.[54] |
Guadalupe wren | Thryomanes bewickii brevicauda | Guadalupe Island, Mexico | 1897 | 1906 | Habitat destruction by introduced goats.[54] |
Stephens Island piopio | Turnagra capensis minor | Stephens Island, New Zealand | 1897 | 1898 | Predation by introduced cats.[54] |
Culebra Island amazon | Amazona vittata gracilipes | Culebra Island of Puerto Rico | 1899 | 1912 | Deforestation and persecution by crop farmers.[54] |
Hawaii mamo | Drepanis pacifica | Hawai'i Island, Hawaii, United States | 1899 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting, habitat destruction, and introduced disease.[295] |
1900s
- Painting of pig-footed bandicoots by John Gould.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Caucasian moose | Alces alces caucasicus | Northern Caucasus and Transcaucasian shore of the Black Sea[296] | c. 1900 | Hunting. The subspecies' validity is questioned because moose from Russia recolonized the Caucasian moose's former range naturally over the 20th century.[297] | |
Saint Croix racer | Borikenophis sanctaecrucis | Saint Croix, United States Virgin Islands | c. 1900 | Undetermined.[298] | |
Gravenche | Coregonus hiemalis | Lake Geneva | c. 1900 | 2008 (IUCN) | Eutrophication and overfishing.[299] |
Lord Howe long-eared bat | Nyctophilus howensis | Lord Howe Island, Australia | c. 1900-1950 | 2020 (IUCN) | Possibly predation by introduced owls and rats.[300] |
Leafshell | Epioblasma flexuosa | Tennessee, Cumberland, and Ohio River systems, United States | 1900[301] | Undetermined. | |
Car Nicobar sparrowhawk | Accipiter butleri butleri | Car Nicobar, Nicobar Islands | 1901 (confirmed) 1977 (unconfirmed) |
1995 | Habitat destruction.[54] |
Southern pig-footed bandicoot | Chaeropus ecaudatus | Interior Australia | 1901 (confirmed) 1950s (unconfirmed) |
1982 (IUCN) | Predation by feral cats and red foxes.[302] |
Tennessee riffleshell | Epioblasma propinqua | Tennessee, Cumberland, Wabash, and Ohio River systems, United States | 1901[303] | Undetermined. | |
Greater ʻamakihi | Viridonia sagittirostris | Wailuku river, Hawai'i Island, United States | 1901 | 1988 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction for sugarcane agriculture.[304] |
Rocky Mountain locust | Melanoplus spretus | Rocky Mountains and North American Prairie | 1902 | 2014 (IUCN)[305] | Breeding habitat loss due to irrigation and cattle ranching. |
Auckland merganser | Mergus australis | South, Stewart, and Auckland Island, New Zealand | 1902 | 1910 1988 (IUCN) |
Hunting and predation by introduced animals.[306] |
North Island piopio | Turnagra tanagra | North Island, New Zealand | 1902 (confirmed) 1970 (unconfirmed) |
1988 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat destruction, hunting, and predation by introduced cats and rats.[307] |
Guadalupe caracara | Caracara lutosa | Guadalupe Island, Mexico | 1903 | 1988 (IUCN) | Extermination campaign.[308] |
Stumptooth minnow | Stypodon signifer | Southern Coahuila, Mexico | 1903 | Habitat degradation and pollution.[262] | |
Choiseul pigeon | Microgoura meeki | Choiseul, Solomon Islands | 1904 | 1994 (IUCN) | Predation by feral dogs and cats.[309] |
Japanese wolf | Canis lupus hodophilax | Honshū, Shikoku and Kyūshū, Japan | 1905 (confirmed)[310] 1910-1996 (unconfirmed)[311][312] |
Hunting and a rabies-like epidemic.[269] | |
South Island piopio | Turnagra capensis | South Island, New Zealand | 1905 (confirmed) 1963 (unconfirmed) |
1988 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat destruction and predation by introduced rats.[313] |
Chatham bellbird | Anthornis melanocephala | Chatham Islands, New Zealand | 1906 | 1938 1988 (IUCN) |
Possibly habitat destruction, predation by rats and cats, and overhunting by collectionists.[314] |
Guadalupe flicker | Colaptes auratus rufipileus | Guadalupe Island, Mexico | 1906 | 1922 | Habitat destruction and predation by introduced goats and cats.[54] |
Black mamo | Drepanis funerea | Molokai and Maui, Hawaii, United States | 1907 | 1988 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction by introduced cattle and deer, and predation by introduced rats and mongooses.[315] |
Huia | Heteralocha acutirostris | North Island, New Zealand | 1907 (confirmed)[316] 1963 (unconfirmed)[317] |
1988 (IUCN) | Hunting and deforestation of old growth forests to make pastures for livestock. |
Huia louse | Rallicola extinctus | North Island, New Zealand | 1907? | 1990 | Extinction of its host.[318] |
Assumption rail | Dryolimnas cuvieri abbotti | Assumption Island, Seychelles | 1908 | 1937 | Hunting, habitat destruction, and predation by introduced rats.[54] |
Siquijor hanging parrot | Loriculus philippensis siquijorensis | Siquijor, Philippines | 1908 | Possibly deforestation and capture for the pet trade.[54] | |
Persoonia laxa | Sydney's Northern Beaches, Australia | 1908 | 2020 (IUCN) | Probably habitat destruction.[319] | |
Alejandro Selkirk firecrown | Sephanoides fernandensis leyboldi | Alejandro Selkirk Island?, Juan Fernández Archipelago, Chile | 1908 | Probably deforestation, predation and erosion caused by introduced cats, rats, goats, and rabbits, and competition of introduced plants with the nesting tree Luma apiculata.[54] | |
Cumberland leafshell | Epioblasma stewardsonii | Tennessee and Coosa River systems, United States | 1909[320] | Undetermined. | |
Bogotá sunangel | Heliantelus zusii | Northern Andes? | 1909 | Possibly deforestation.[54] | |
Tarpan | Equus ferus ferus | Europe | 1879 (wild)[321] 1909 (captive) |
Hunting and hybridization with domestic horses. |
1910s
- Depiction of juvenile, male, and female passenger pigeons, by Louis Agassiz Fuertes (1910).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Southwestern thick-billed grasswren | Amytornis textilis macrourus | Southwest Australia | 1910 | Drought and overgrazing by livestock and introduced mammals.[54] | |
Maui hau kuahiwi | Hibiscadelphus wilderianus | Maui, Hawaii, United States | 1910[242] | 1978 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[322] |
Yellowfin cutthroat trout | Oncorhynchus clarki macdonaldi | Twin Lakes, Colorado, United States | 1910 | Hybridization with rainbow trout and competition with lake trout, both introduced.[262] | |
Slender-billed grackle | Quiscalus palustris | Lerma River and Xochimilco, Mexico | 1910 | 1988 (IUCN) | Draining of marshlands.[323] |
Iwo Jima rail | Amaurornis cinerea breviceps | Naka Iwo Jima and Minami Iwo Jima, Bonin Islands, Japan | 1911 (confirmed) 1925 (unconfirmed) |
Habitat clearance for agriculture and predation by introduced cats and rats.[54] | |
New Caledonian buttonquail | Turnix novaecaledoniae | New Caledonia | 1911 | Hunting, habitat degradation and predation by introduced animals.[324] | |
Namoi Valley thick-billed grasswren | Amytornis textilis inexpectatus | Central New South Wales, Australia | 1912 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Cape Verde giant skink | Chioninia coctei | Cape Verde | 1912 (confirmed) 2005 (unconfirmed) |
1996 (IUCN) | Predation by feral cats.[325] |
Guadalupe storm petrel | Oceanodroma macrodactyla | Guadalupe Island, Mexico | 1912 | Predation by feral cats, and habitat degradation by goat grazing.[326] | |
Bornean Baillon's crake | Porzana pusilla mira | Borneo | 1912 | Deforestation?[54] | |
Laysan millerbird | Acrocephalus familiaris familiaris | Laysan, Hawaii, United States | 1913 | 1923 | Habitat destruction by introduced rabbits.[54] |
New Caledonian lorikeet | Charmosyna diadema | New Caledonia | 1913 (confirmed) 1976 (unconfirmed) |
1998 | Undetermined.[327] |
Canary Islands oystercatcher | Haematopus meadewaldoi | Lanzarote and Fuerteventura, Spain; Senegal? | 1913 (confirmed) 1981 (unconfirmed) |
Overharvesting of intertidal invertebrates.[328] | |
Passenger pigeon | Ectopistes migratorius | Eastern North America | 1901 (wild, confirmed)[329] 1902-1907 (unconfirmed)[329][330] 1914 (captive) |
Hunting and habitat loss. | |
Laughing owl | Ninox albifacies | New Zealand | 1914 (confirmed) 1960 (unconfirmed)[331] |
1988 (IUCN) | Competition or predation by introduced stoats and cats.[332] |
Kenai Peninsula wolf | Canis lupus alces | Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, United States | c. 1915[333] | Extermination campaign. | |
Dirk Hartog thick-billed grasswren | Amytornis textilis carteri | Dirk Hartog Island, Western Australia | 1918 | Predation by introduced rats.[54] | |
Lord Howe starling | Aplonis fusca hulliana | Lord Howe Island, Australia | 1918 | 1928 1988 (IUCN) |
Predation by introduced black rats.[334] |
Robust white-eye | Zosterops strenuus | Lord Howe Island, Australia | 1918[54] | 1928 1988 (IUCN) |
Predation by black rats.[335] |
Bernard's wolf | Canis lupus bernardi | Banks Island, Canada | 1918-1952[336] | Undetermined. It's been suggested that Bernard's wolf should be merged with the extant arctic wolf[337] or other wolves from the continent.[336] | |
Carolina parakeet | Conorupsis carolinensis | Eastern and central United States | 1910 (wild) 1918 (captive) 1930s (wild, unconfirmed) |
1988 (IUCN) | Hunting, habitat loss, and competition with introduced bees.[338] |
Lānaʻi hookbill | Dysmorodrepanis munroi | Lana'i, Hawaii, United States | 1918 | 1988 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction for pineapple agriculture, and predation by introduced cats and rats.[339] |
Appalachian Barbara's buttons | Marshallia grandiflora | Henderson and Polk counties, North Carolina, United States | 1919 | 2020 | Undetermined.[340] |
1920s
- A paradise parrot photographed next to its burrow in 1922.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Florida black wolf | Canis rufus[341] floridanus | Southeastern United States | c. 1920 | Hunting and habitat loss.[341] | |
True fera | Coregonus fera | Lake Geneva | 1920 | 2008 (IUCN) | Eutrophication and overfishing.[342] |
Great Plains wolf | Canis lupus nubilus | North American prairie | 1922[343] | 1926[344] | Extermination campaign. The Great Plains wolf has been later determined to be continuous morphologically[337] and genetically[345] with the still existing Mexican wolf, which would use the name C. l. nubilus if placed in the same subspecies, due to being the older one. |
Red-moustached fruit dove | Ptilinopus mercierii | Marquesas, French Polynesia | 1922 | 1994 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced great horned owls, rats, and cats.[346] |
Norfolk Island starling | Aplonis fusca fusca | Norfolk Island, Australia | 1923 | 1968 1988 (IUCN) |
Undetermined.[334] |
Laysan honeycreeper | Himatione fraithii | Laysan, Hawaii, United States | 1923 | 2016 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction by introduced rabbits.[347] |
Nazareno | Monteverdia lineata | Western Cuba | 1923 | 2020 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat degradation.[348] |
Round combshell | Epioblasma personata | Tennessee, Wabash, and Ohio River systems, United States | 1924 | Undetermined.[349] | |
Lord Howe fantail | Rhipidura fuliginosa cervina | Lord Howe Island, Australia | 1924 | 1928 | Probably predation by introduced rats.[54] |
California grizzly bear | Ursus arctos californicus | California, United States | 1924 | Hunting.[350] | |
Bubal hartebeest | Alcelaphus buselaphus buselaphus | North Africa and Southern Levant | 1925 | Hunting.[351] | |
Anthony's woodrat | Neotoma bryanti anthonyi | Isla Todos Santos, Mexico | 1926 | 2008 (IUCN) | Predation by feral cats.[352] |
Thick-billed ground dove | Alopecoenas salamonis | Solomon Islands | 1927 | 2005 (IUCN) | Probably habitat destruction, hunting, and predation by introduced cats and rats.[353] |
Caucasian wisent | Bison bonasus caucasicus | Caucasus Mountains | 1927[354] | Hunting. Hybrid descendants exist in captivity, and have been reintroduced to the wild.[355] | |
Snake River sucker | Chasmistes muriei | Snake River, United States | 1927 | Hybridization with the Utah sucker after dams changed the river's flow.[262] | |
Syrian wild ass | Equus hemionus hemippus | Near East | 1927 | Hunting.[356] | |
Hawaii yellowwood | Ochrosia kilaueaensis | Hawai'i, Hawaii, United States | 1927 | 2020 (IUCN) | Habitat degradation by introduced plants, goats, and fires.[357] |
Cry pansy | Viola cryana | Cry, Yonne, France | 1927 | 2011 (IUCN) | Overcollection by botanists and limestone quarrying.[358] |
Utah Lake sculpin | Cottus echinatus | Utah Lake, Utah, United States | 1928 | Increased water pollution and salinity caused by agriculture, and introduced fishes. The last individuals may have been killed by drought in the 1930s.[262] | |
Lord Howe gerygone | Gerygone insularis | Lord Howe Island, Australia | 1928 | 1936 1988 (IUCN) |
Predation by introduced rats.[359] |
Paradise parrot | Psephotellus pulcherrimus | Eastern Australia | 1928 | 1994 (IUCN) | Probably habitat degradation.[360] |
Acalypha wilderi | Northwestern Rarotonga, Cook Islands | 1929 | 2014 (IUCN) | Deforestation for agriculture and housing development. Doubts exist about it being distinct from still living A. raivavensis and A. tubuaiensis; if indeed the same, the older name A. wilderi prevails.[361] | |
St. Kitts bullfinch | Melopyrrha grandis | Saint Kitts | 1929 | 1972 | Deforestation?[54] |
Makira woodhen | Pareudiastes silvestris | Makira, Solomon Islands | 1929 (confirmed) 2002 (unconfirmed) |
Probably predation by introduced cats and rats.[54] | |
Scleria chevalieri | Western Senegal | 1929 | 2020 (IUCN) | Draining of wetland habitat.[362] |
1930s
- "Benjamin", the last known thylacine, photographed in 1933.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Western rufous bristlebird | Dasyornis broadbenti littoralis | Southwestern Australia | c. 1930 | Burning of shrublands for pasture and predation by introduced cats.[54] | |
Tahiti rail | Hypotaenidia pacifica | Tahiti and Mehetia?, French Polynesia[54] | 1930-1939 | 1988 (IUCN) | Probably predation by introduced cats and rats.[363] |
St Kilda house mouse | Mus musculus muralis | St Kilda, Scotland | 1930 | Complete evacuation of St Kilda's human population, which it depended on.[364] | |
Darwin's Galápagos mouse | Nesoryzomys darwini | Santa Cruz, Galápagos Islands, Ecuador | 1930 | Competition, predation, and exotic pathogens from introduced black rats.[365] | |
Nuku Hiva monarch | Pomarea nukuhivae | Nuku Hiva, Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia | 1930-1939 (confirmed) 1977 (unconfirmed) |
1972 2006 (IUCN) |
Probably habitat destruction and predation by introduced species.[366] |
Silver trout | Salvelinus agassizi | Dublin Pond and Christine Lake, New Hampshire, United States | 1930 | Overfishing and introduction of exotic fish.[262] | |
Bunker's woodrat | Neotoma bryanti bunkeri | Coronados Islands, Mexico | 1931 | 2008 (IUCN) | Depletion of food resources and predation by feral cats.[367] |
Roosevelt's giant anole | Anolis roosevelti | Virgin Islands | 1932 | Possibly deforestation.[368] | |
Western Lewin's rail | Lewinia pectoralis clelandii | Southwest Australia | 1932 | 1980s | Drainage and burning of wetlands for agriculture and settlement.[54] |
Heath hen | Tympanuchus cupido cupido | East Coast of the United States | 1932 | Hunting, predation by feral cats, wildfires, and histomoniasis transmitted by domestic poultry.[369][370] | |
Wolseley conebush | Leucadendron spirale | Breede River Valley, South Africa | 1933 | 2020 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction for timber plantations and agriculture, competition with invasive plants.[371] |
Lost shark | Carcharhinus obsoletus | Southern South China Sea | 1934 | Fishing.[372] | |
Hawaiʻi ʻōʻō | Moho nobilis | Lana'i, Hawaii, United States | 1934 | 1988 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat loss and disease.[373] |
Indefatigable Galápagos mouse | Nesoryzomys indefessus | Santa Cruz and Baltra, Galápagos Islands, Ecuador | 1934 | 2008 (IUCN) | Introduction of black rats.[374] |
Aguelmame Sidi Ali trout | Salmo pallaryi | Lake Aguelmame Sidi Ali, Morocco | 1934[375] | 2006 (IUCN) | Introduction of the common carp.[376] |
Desert rat-kangaroo | Caloprymnus campestris | Central Australia | 1935 (confirmed) 1957-2011 (unconfirmed) |
1994 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced red foxes and cats.[377] |
Mogollon mountain wolf | Canis lupus mogollonensis | Arizona, United States | 1935[378] | Hunting. The subspecific differences between extinct Great Plains wolf, Mogollon mountain wolf, Southern Rocky Mountain wolf, and surviving Mexican wolf have been denied on morphological grounds.[337] | |
Southern Rocky Mountain wolf | Canis lupus youngi | Southern Rocky Mountains | 1935[378] | ||
Ryukyu wood pigeon | Columba jouyi | Ryukyu, Japan | 1936 | 1988 (IUCN)[379] | Possibly deforestation.[54] |
Thylacine | Thylacinus cynocephalus | Australia and New Guinea | 3050 BCE (New Guinea)[19] 1277-1229 BCE (Australia)[380] 1931 (Tasmania)[381] 1936 (captivity) 1937-2000 (unconfirmed)[382] |
1982 (IUCN)[383] | Competition with humans and dingos, extermination campaign (in Tasmania). |
Bali tiger | Panthera tigris balica | Bali, Indonesia | 1937 (confirmed)[236] 1972 (unconfirmed) |
Hunting and habitat loss. Genetics do not support a subspecific differentiation with the living Sumatran tiger.[237] | |
Marquesas swamphen | Porphyrio paepae | Hiva Oa and Tahuata, Marquesas, French Polynesia | 1937 | 2014 (IUCN) | Probably hunting and predation by rats and cats.[384] |
Banara wilsonii | Puerto Padre, Cuba | 1938 | 2020 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction for sugarcane cultivation.[385] | |
McGregor's house finch | Carpodacus mexicanus mcgregori | San Benito Island, Mexico | 1938 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Grand Cayman oriole | Icterus leucopteryx bairdi | Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands | 1938 (confirmed) 1967 (unconfirmed) |
Deforestation.[54] | |
Pahranagat spinedace | Lepidomeda altivelis | Pahranagat Valley, Nevada, United States | 1938 | Competition and predation by introduced common carps, mosquitofish, and American bullfrogs.[262] | |
Bougainville black-faced pitta | Pitta anerythra pallida | Bougainville Island, Papua-New Guinea | 1938 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Eastern cougar | Puma concolor couguar | Eastern North America | 1938 (confirmed)[386] 1992 (unconfirmed) |
2011[387] | Hunting. Genetics do not support subspecies differentiation between the eastern cougar and living cougars in Florida and Western North America;[237] if placed under a single subspecies, this would have the name P. c. couguar because of being older. |
Grass Valley speckled dace | Rhynichthys osculus reliquus | Lander County, Nevada, United States | 1938 | Introduction of the rainbow trout.[262] | |
Daito varied tit | Sittiparus varius orii | Kitadaitōjima, Okinawa, Japan | 1938 | 1984-1986 | Habitat destruction for agriculture and military infrastructure.[54] |
Schomburgk's deer | Rucervus schomburgki | Central Thailand | 1932 (wild) 1938 (captive) |
1994 (IUCN) | Hunting.[388] |
Grand Cayman thrush | Turdus ravidus | Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands | 1938 | 1965 1988 (IUCN) |
Probably habitat loss.[389] |
Toolache wallaby | Macropus greyi | Southeastern Australia | 1924 (wild, confirmed) 1939 (captive) 1943-1970s (wild, unconfirmed) |
1982 (IUCN) | Habitat loss to agriculture, hunting, and predation by introduced red fox.[390] |
Roystonea stellata | Baracoa, eastern Cuba | 1939 | 2020 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction for coffee cultivation.[391] |
1940s
- Laysan rail photographed in 1913.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sugarspoon | Epioblasma arcaeformis | Cumberland and Tennessee river systems, United States | c. 1940 | 1983 (IUCN) | Damming.[392] |
Lesser ʻakialoa | Akialoa obscura | Hawai'i Island, Hawaii, United States | 1940 | 1994 (IUCN) | Possibly deforestation and introduced disease-carrying mosquitos.[393] |
Cascade mountain wolf | Canis lupus fuscus | Continental Cascadia[337] | 1940[378] | Hunting. | |
Las Vegas dace | Rhinichthys deaconi | Las Vegas Valley, Nevada, United States | 1940 | 1965 | Habitat destruction.[262] |
Javan lapwing | Vanellus macropterus | Java, Indonesia | 1940 | Hunting and habitat loss to agriculture.[394] | |
Arabian ostrich | Struthio camelus syriacus | Arabian Peninsula and the Near East | c. 1941 (confirmed) 1966 (unconfirmed) |
Hunting.[395] | |
Texas gray wolf | Canis lupus monstrabilis | Texas, United States | 1942[378] | Hunting. The Texas gray wolf has been at times included within either the extinct Great Plains wolf or the living Mexican wolf on morphological grounds.[337] | |
Chapin's crombec | Sylvietta leucophrys chapini | Lendu Plateau, Democratic Republic of the Congo | 1942 | Deforestation.[54] | |
Eriocaulon inundatum | Senegal coast | 1943 | 2020 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction for salt mining.[396] | |
Cebu hanging parrot | Loriculus philippensis chrysonotus | Cebu, Philippines | 1929 (wild) 1943 (captive) 2004 (wild, dubious) |
Deforestation.[54] | |
Barbary lion | Panthera leo leo | North Africa | 1943 (confirmed)[236] 1956 (unconfirmed) |
Habitat loss from desertification and human activities, followed by extermination campaign. Hybrid descendants are believed to exist in captivity.[397] However, genetics do not support subspecies differentiation with living wild lions in Asia, West and Central Africa,[237] which would be named P. l. leo if placed within a single subspecies. | |
Desert bandicoot | Perameles eremiana | Central Australia | 1943 (confirmed) 1960-1970 (unconfirmed) |
1982 (IUCN) | Predation by cats and foxes, competition with European rabbits, and changes to the fire regime after the British colonization of Australia.[398] |
American ivory-billed woodpecker | Campephilus principalis principalis | Southern United States | 1944 (confirmed)[399] 2008 (unconfirmed)[400][401] |
Logging and hunting. | |
Laysan rail | Zapornia palmeri | Laysan, Hawaii, United States | 1944 | 1988 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction by introduced rabbits and guinea pigs, and predation by introduced rats.[402] |
Wake Island rail | Hypotaenidia wakensis | Wake Island, United States | 1945 | 1988 (IUCN) | Hunting and destruction caused by fighting in World War II.[403] |
Ash Meadows killifish | Empetrichthys merriami | Ash Meadows, Nevada, United States | 1948 | Predation by introduced bullfrogs and red swamp crayfish.[262] | |
Sinú parakeet | Pyrrhura subandina | Sinú Valley, Córdoba, Colombia | 1949 | Possibly hunting and habitat loss.[54] | |
Pink-headed duck | Rhodonessa caryophyllacea | Northeast India, Bangladesh, and northern Myanmar | 1949 (confirmed) 2011 (unconfirmed) |
Habitat loss to agriculture.[404] |
1950s
- Japanese sea lion drawn by Philipp Franz von Siebold (1823-1829).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Little Swan Island hutia | Geocapromys thoracatus | Little Swan Island, Honduras | c. 1950 | 1996 (IUCN) | Introduced rats.[405] |
Eriocaulon jordanii | Sierra Leone coast | 1950-1959 | 2020 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat destruction for rice cultivation.[406] | |
San Martín Island woodrat | Neotoma bryanti martinensis | Isla San Martín, Mexico | 1950-1959 | 2008 (IUCN) | Predation by feral cats.[407] |
Tawi-tawi buttonquail | Turnix sylvaticus suluensis | Jolo and Tawi-tawi, Sulu, Philippines | 1950-1959 | Possibly deforestation and predation by introduced animals.[54] | |
Japanese sea lion | Zalophus japonicus | Japanese Islands and Korea | 1951 (confirmed) 1975 (unconfirmed) |
1994 (IUCN) | Hunting.[408] |
Niceforo's pintail | Anas georgica niceforoi | Central Colombia | 1952 | Possibly hunting and habitat degradation.[54] | |
Deepwater cisco | Coregonus johannae | Lakes Michigan and Huron | 1952 | 1986 (IUCN) | Overfishing, predation by introduced lampreys, and hybridization with more common ciscoes.[262] |
Caribbean monk seal | Neomonachus tropicalis | Caribbean Sea, Bahamas, and Gulf of Mexico | 1952 (confirmed) 1962 (unconfirmed)[409] |
1994 (IUCN) 2008[410] |
Hunting.[411] |
San Benedicto rock wren | Salpinctes obsoletus exsul | San Benedicto, Revillagigedo Islands, Mexico | 1952 | Eruption of the El Boquerón vent.[54] | |
New Mexico sharp-tailed grouse | Tympanuchus phasianellus hueyi | New Mexico (and Colorado?), United States | 1952 | Aridification and habitat destruction.[54] | |
Ilin Island cloudrunner | Crateromys paulus | Mindoro and Ilin Islands, Philippines | 50 BCE (Mindoro)[19] 1953 (Ilin) |
Deforestation?[412] | |
Raycraft Ranch killifish | Empetrichthys latos concavus | Pahrump Valley, Nevada, United States | 1953 | Predation by introduced carps and bullfrogs.[262] | |
Faramea chiapensis | Selva Negra, Chiapas, Mexico | 1953 | 2020 (IUCN) | Deforestation for agriculture.[413] | |
Negros fruit dove | Ptilinopus arcanus | Negros Island, Philippines | 1953 | Deforestation?[54] | |
Schizothorax saltans | Talas River basin, Kazakhstan | 1953 | 2020 (IUCN) | Water extraction, pollution, and fisheries.[414] | |
Maravillas red shiner | Cyprinella lutrensis blairi | Maravillas Creek, Texas, United States | 1954 | 1987 | Introduction of plains killifish.[262] |
Plateau chub | Evarra eigenmanni | Chalco and Xochimilco-Tlahuac channels, Valley of Mexico | 1954 | 1986 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction and pollution.[415] |
Coosa elktoe | Alasmidonta mccordi | Coosa River, Alabama, United States | 1956 | 2000 (IUCN) | Impoundment of the Coosa River.[416] |
Imperial woodpecker | Campephilus imperialis | North-Central Mexico | 1956 | Hunting and habitat loss.[417] | |
Levuana moth | Levuana iridescens | Viti Levu, Fiji | 1956[418] | 1994 (IUCN)[419] | Introduction of the parasitic fly Bessa remota by coconut farmers, as a form of biological pest control. It's been argued that L. iridescens was not actually native to Fiji and that lack of post-1956 records is the result of diminished enthomological research after Fiji's independence.[418] |
Crescent nail-tail wallaby | Onychogalea lunata | Western and central Australia | 1956[420] | 1982 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced foxes and feral cats, human-induced habitat degradation.[421] |
Thicktail chub | Gila crassicauda | California Central Valley and San Francisco Bay, United States | 1957 | Habitat destruction for agriculture and introduced fish.[262] | |
Scioto madtom | Noturus trautmani | Big Darby Creek, Ohio, United States | 1957 | 2013 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[422] |
Hainan ormosia | Ormosia howii | Hainan and Guangdong, China | 1957[423] | 1998 (IUCN) | Possibly deforestation for agriculture.[424] |
Pahrump Ranch poolfish | Empetrichthys latos pahrump | Nye County, Nevada, United States | 1958 | Habitat destruction by excessive water pumping.[262] | |
Blue Pike | Stizostedion vitreum glaucum | Lake Erie, Ontario, and Niagara River | 1958 | 1983 | Overfishing and hybridization with walleye.[425] |
Rennell Island teal | Anas gibberifrons remissia | Rennell Island, Solomon Islands | 1959 | Competition with introduced Tilapia fish.[54] | |
Santa Barbara song sparrow | Melospiza melodia graminea | Santa Barbara Island, California, United States | 1959 | 1983 | Wildfire.[425] |
1960s
- Illustration of a lesser bilby by Oldfield Thomas.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lesser bilby | Macrotis leucura | Deserts of Australia | c. 1960 | 1982 (IUCN) | Probably predation by introduced cats and red foxes, and changes to the fire regime.[426] |
Candango mouse | Juscelinomys candango | Brasilia, Brazil | 1960 | 2008 (IUCN) | Urban sprawl.[427] |
Northern white-winged apalis | Apalis chariessa chariessa | Lower Tana river, Kenya | 1961 | Deforestation.[54] | |
Viesca mud turtle | Kinosternon hirtipes megacephalum | Southwestern Coahuila, Mexico | 1961 | Aridification.[428] | |
Semper's warbler | Leucopeza semperi | St Lucia mountains | 1961 (confirmed) 2015 (unconfirmed) |
Predation by introduced Javan mongooses.[429] | |
Durango shiner | Notropis aulidion | Tunal river, Durango, Mexico | 1961 | Pollution and introduced species.[262] | |
Kākāwahie | Paroreomyza flammea | Molokai, Hawaii, United States | 1961-1963 | 1979 1994 (IUCN) |
Probably habitat destruction and introduced disease.[430] |
Zacatecas Worthen's sparrow | Spizella wortheni browni | Northwest Zacatecas, Mexico | 1961 | 1991 | Habitat destruction caused by agriculture, overgrazing, cattle-induced erosion, and decline of native herbivores.[54] |
Red-bellied gracile opossum | Cryptonanus ignitus | Jujuy, Argentina | 1962 | 2008 (IUCN) | Habitat loss to agriculture and industry development.[431] |
Hawaii chaff flower | Achyranthes atollensis | The atolls Kure, Midway, Pearl and Hermes, and Laysan of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, United States | 1964 | 2003 (IUCN) | Habitat loss due to the construction of military installations.[432] |
Barbodes disa | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1964 | 2020 (IUCN) | Overfishing and predation by introduced tank goby and ornate sleeper.[433][434][435][436][437][438] | |
Katapa-tapa | Barbodes flavifuscus | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1964 | 2020 (IUCN) | |
Kandar | Barbodes lanaoensis | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1964 | 2020 (IUCN) | |
Bitungu | Barbodes pachycheilus | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1964 | 2020 (IUCN) | |
Barbodes palata | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1964 | 2020 (IUCN) | ||
Bagangan | Barbodes resimus | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1964 | 2020 (IUCN) | |
South Island snipe | Coenocorypha iredalei | South and Stewart islands, New Zealand | 1964 | 2014 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced animals.[439] |
Lake Ontario kiyi | Coregonus kiyi orientalis | Lake Ontario | 1964 | Overfishing, introduction of exotic species, eutrophication, and water pollution.[262] | |
Goldman's yellow rail | Coturnicops noveboracensis goldmani | Lerma River, Mexico | 1964 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Rio Grande bluntnose shiner | Notropis simus simus | Upper Rio Grande | 1964 | Possibly habitat degradation and introduced species.[262] | |
Crested shelduck | Tadorna cristata | Primorye, Hokkaido, and Korea; Northeastern China? |
1964 (confirmed) 1971 (unconfirmed) |
Undetermined.[440] | |
Turgid blossom | Epioblasma turgidula | Southern Appalachians and Cumberland Plateau, United States | 1965 | Damming and water pollution.[441] | |
Independence Valley tui chub | Gila bicolor isolata | Warm Springs, Nevada, United States | 1966 | Predation by introduced species.[262] | |
Narrow catspaw | Epioblasma lenior | Tennessee River system, United States | 1967 | Damming.[442] | |
Saint Helena earwig | Labidura herculeana | Saint Helena | 1967 | Predation by introduced animals.[443] | |
New Zealand greater short-tailed bat | Mystacina robusta | New Zealand | 1967 | 1988 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced Polynesian and black rats.[444] |
Amistad gambusia | Gambusia amistadensis | Goodenough Spring, Texas, United States | 1968 | 1987 | Flooding of the spring by the Amistad Reservoir, hybridization and predation.[425][262] |
San Clemente wren | Thryomanes bewickii leucophrys | San Clemente, Channel Islands of California, United States | c. 1968 | Vegetation destruction by introduced goats and sheep.[54] | |
Bushwren | Xenicus longipes | New Zealand | 1968 (confirmed) 1972 (unconfirmed) |
1994 (IUCN)[445] | Predation by introduced cats, rats, weasels, and stoats.[54] |
Kauaʻi ʻakialoa | Akialoa stejnegeri | Kaua'i, Hawaii, United States | 1969 | 2016 (IUCN) | Possibly habitat destruction and introduced disease.[446] |
Blackfin cisco | Coregonus nigripinnis | Lakes Michigan and Huron | 1969 | Overfishing, predation by introduced sea lampreys, and hybridization with other ciscoes.[262] | |
Tubercled blossom | Epioblasma torulosa torulosa | Tennessee and Ohio River systems, United States | 1969 | Impoundment, siltation, and pollution.[447] | |
Kouprey | Bos sauveli | Northeastern Cambodia | 1969-1970 (confirmed)[448] 1982-1983 (unconfirmed)[449] |
Hunting. |
1970s
- Yunnan lake newts by George Albert Boulenger (1905).
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Socorro elf owl | Micrathene whitneyi graysoni | Socorro, Revillagigedo Islands, Mexico | c. 1970 | Habitat degradation.[54] | |
Mexican dace | Evarra bustamantei | Xochimilco-Tlahuac channels, Valley of Mexico | 1970 | 1986 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction and pollution.[450] |
Endorheic chub | Evarra tlahuacensis | Lake Chalco, Valley of Mexico | 1970 | 1986 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction and pollution.[451] |
Saudi gazelle | Gazella saudiya | Arabian Peninsula | 1970 | 2008 (IUCN) | Hunting.[452] |
Clear Lake splittail | Pogonichthys ciscoides | Clear Lake and its tributaries, California, United States | 1970 | Habitat destruction and pollution from agriculture.[262] | |
Pagan reed warbler | Acrocephalus yamashinae | Pagan, Northern Mariana Islands | 1970-1979 | 1981 | Habitat destruction and predation by introduced rats and cats.[54] |
Acornshell | Epioblasma haysiana | Tennessee and Cumberland River systems, United States | 1970-1979 | Exposure to domestic sewage.[453] | |
Western Turner's eremomela | Eremomela turneri kalindei | Southeast D. R. Congo and southwest Uganda | 1970-1979 | Deforestation.[54] | |
Ticao Tarictic hornbill | Penelopidis panini ticaensis | Ticao Island, Philippines | 1971 | Habitat destruction.[54] | |
Tecopa pupfish | Cyprinodon nevadensis calidae | Tecopa Hot Springs, California, United States | 1972 | 1982 | Habitat degradation and introduced bluegill sunfish and mosquito fish.[425] |
Tropical acidweed | Desmarestia tropica | Galápagos Islands, Ecuador | 1972 | Undetermined.[454] | |
Mason River myrtle | Myrcia skeldingii | Mason River, Jamaica | 1972 | 1998 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[455] |
Moorea reed warbler | Acrocephalus longirostris | Moorea, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1973 | 1987 | Possibly predation by introduced animals, deforestation, or avian malaria.[54] |
Bitungu | Barbodes truncatulus | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1973 | 2020 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced tank goby and ornate sleeper.[456] |
Bar-winged rail | Hypotaenidia poeciloptera | Fiji | 1973 | 1994 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced cats and mongooses.[457] |
Guadeloupe house wren | Troglodytes aedon guadeloupensis | Guadeloupe | 1973 | Deforestation.[54] | |
Barbodes herrei | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1974 | 2020 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced tank goby and ornate sleeper.[458] | |
Vanua Levu long-legged thicketbird | Cincloramphus rufus cluniei | Vanua Levu, Fiji | 1974 (confirmed) 1990 (unconfirmed) |
Undetermined.[54] | |
Aragua robber frog | Pristimantis anotis | Henri Pittier National Park, Aragua, Venezuela | 1974 | Chytridiomycosis?[459] | |
Bagangan | Barbodes clemensi | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1975 | 2020 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced tank goby and ornate sleeper.[460] |
Bitungu | Barbodes palaemophagus | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1975 | 2020 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced tank goby and ornate sleeper.[461] |
Longjaw cisco | Coregonus alpenae | Lakes Michigan, Huron, and Erie | 1975 | 1986 (IUCN) | Overfishing, predation by introduced sea lampreys, and hybridization with introduced ciscoes.[262] |
Phantom shiner | Notropis orca | Rio Grande | 1975 | Possibly habitat loss, hybridization with the bluntnose shiner, and introduction of exotic fishes.[262] | |
Barbodes tras | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1976 | 2020 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced tank goby and ornate sleeper.[462] | |
Jalpa false brook salamander | Pseudoeurycea exspectata | Cerro Miramundo, Jalapa, Guatemala | 1976 | 2020 (IUCN) | Possibly logging and cattle grazing.[463] |
Mexican grizzly bear | Ursus arctos nelsoni | Aridoamerica | 1976[464] | Hunting. | |
Barbodes katolo | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1977 | 2020 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced tank goby and ornate sleeper.[465] | |
Barbodes manalak | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1977 | 2020 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced tank goby and ornate sleeper.[466] | |
Gonâve eastern chat-tanager | Calyptophilus frugivorus abbotti | Gonâve Island, Haiti | 1977 | Deforestation.[54] | |
Colombian grebe | Podiceps andinus | Bogotá wetlands, Colombia | 1977 | 1994 (IUCN) | Habitat loss, pollution, hunting, and predation of chicks by introduced rainbow trout.[467] |
Eiao monarch | Pomarea fluxa | Eiao, Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia | 1977 | 2006 (IUCN) | Possibly predation by introduced cats, black rats, and Polynesian rats; disease transmitted by introduced chestnut-breasted mannikin, and habitat loss due to grazing by sheep.[468] |
Craugastor myllomyllon | Finca Volcán, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala | 1978 | 2020 (IUCN) | Habitat destruction for agriculture.[469] | |
White-eyed river martin | Eurochelidon sirintarae | Central Thailand | 1978 | Hunting and habitat loss.[470] | |
Little earth hutia | Mesocapromys sanfelipensis | Key Juan García, Cuba | 1978 | Hunting, man-made fires, and competition with black rats.[471] | |
Yunnan lake newt | Cynops wolterstorffi | Kunming Lake, Yunnan, China | 1979 | 2004 (IUCN) | Pollution, habitat destruction, and introduced fish and frog species.[472] |
Japanese river otter | Lutra lutra whiteleyi | Japan | 1979 | 2012 | Hunting and habitat loss.[473] |
Caspian tiger | Panthera tigris virgata | Transcaucasia, Kurdistan, Hyrcania, Afghanistan, and Turkestan | 1972 (wild, confirmed) 1979 (captive) 2007 (wild, unconfirmed) |
Hunting and desertification.[236] Genetics do not support subspecific differentiation with extant mainland tigers.[237] | |
Mount Glorious day frog | Taudactylus diurnus | Southeast Queensland, Australia | 1979 | 2002 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[474] |
1980s
- Ivory-billed woodpecker pair photographed in 1935.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Olomaʻo | Myadestes lanaiensis | Maui, Lana'i, and Molokai, Hawaii | 1980 (confirmed) 2005 (unconfirmed) |
Disease and habitat degradation caused by introduced pigs, axis deer, and mosquitos.[475] | |
Anabarilius macrolepis | Yilong Lake, Yunnan, China | 1981 | 2011 (IUCN) | Drying of the lake for 20 days, after excessive water abstraction for agriculture.[476] | |
Mariana mallard | Anas platyrhynchos oustaleti | Mariana Islands | 1979 (wild) 1981 (captive)[477] |
2004 | Hunting and habitat loss to agriculture.[478] |
Yilong carp | Cyprinus yilongensis | Yilong Lake, Yunnan, China | 1981 | 1996 (IUCN) | Drying of the lake after excessive water abstraction for agriculture.[479] |
Puhielelu hibiscadelphus | Hibiscadelphus crucibracteatus | Lana'i, Hawaii, United States | 1981 | Predation by introduced axis deer.[242] | |
Bishop's ʻōʻō | Moho bishopi | Molokai, Hawaii, United States | 1981 | 2000 (IUCN) | Habitat loss to agriculture and livestock grazing, followed by the introduction of black rats and disease-carrying mosquitos.[480] |
Southern gastric-brooding frog | Rheobatrachus silus | Southeast Queensland, Australia | 1981 | 2002 (IUCN) | Undetermined, possibly chytridiomycosis.[481] |
Galápagos damsel | Azurina eupalama | Galápagos Islands, Ecuador | 1982-1983 | 1982-83 El Niño event.[482] | |
Pait | Barbodes amarus | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1982 | 2020 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced fishes.[483] |
Samaná eastern chat-tanager | Calyptophilus frugivorus frugivorus | Samaná Peninsula, Dominican Republic | 1982 | Deforestation.[54] | |
San Marcos gambusia | Gambusia georgei | San Marcos spring and river, Texas, United States | 1983 | 1990 | Reduced flow and pollution from agriculture, introduced fishes and plants (Colocasia esculenta), and hybridization with Gambusia affinis.[484] |
24-rayed sunstar | Heliaster solaris | Galápagos Islands, Ecuador | 1983 | 1982-83 El Niño event.[485] | |
Guam flycatcher | Myiagra freycineti | Guam | 1983 | 1994 (IUCN) 2004[478] |
Predation by the introduced brown tree snake.[486] |
Formosan clouded leopard | Neofelis nebulosa brachyura | Taiwan | 1983 (confirmed) 2019 (unconfirmed) |
2013[487] | Hunting. Subspecific status has been denied on morphological and genetic grounds.[237] |
Aldabra brush-warbler | Nesillas aldabrana | Malabar Island, Seychelles | 1983 | 1994 (IUCN) | Possibly predation by introduced cats and rats, and habitat degradation by goats and tortoises.[488] |
Guam bridled white-eye | Zosterops conspicillatus conspicillatus | Guam | 1983 | Predation by introduced brown tree snakes.[54] | |
Atitlán grebe | Podilymbus gigas | Lake Atitlán, Guatemala | 1983-1986 | 1994 (IUCN) | Predation and competition with introduced largemouth bass, water level fall after the 1976 Guatemala earthquake, and degradation of breeding sites due to reed-cutting and tourism development.[489] |
Green blossom | Epioblasma torulosa gubernaculum | Tennessee River system, United States | 1984 | Impoundment, siltation, and pollution.[447] | |
Javan tiger | Panthera tigris sondaica | Java, Indonesia | 1984 | 1994 | Hunting and habitat loss.[236] Genetics do not support subspecies differentiation with the extant Sumatran tiger; if placed in the same subspecies, this would have the name P. t. sondaica due to being older.[237] |
Guam rufous fantail | Rhipidura rufifrons uraniae | Guam | 1984 | Predation by introduced brown tree snakes.[54] | |
California condor louse | Colpocephalum californici | North America | c. 1985 | Delousing of all surviving California condors as prerequisite for their captive breeding program.[15] | |
Timucua heart lichen | Cora timucua | Florida, United States | 1985 | Habitat destruction for urban development.[490] | |
Christmas Island shrew | Crocidura trichura | Christmas Island, Australia | 1985 (confirmed) 1998 (unconfirmed) |
Undetermined.[491] | |
Kāmaʻo | Myadestes myadestinus | Kaua'i, Hawaii, United States | 1985 (confirmed) 1991 (unconfirmed) |
2004 (IUCN) | Habitat loss and disease spread by introduced mosquitos.[492] |
Ua Pou monarch | Pomarea mira | Ua Pou, Marquesas, French Polynesia | 1985 (confirmed) 2010 (unconfirmed) |
Deforestation and predation by introduced black rats.[493] | |
Northern gastric-brooding frog | Rheobatrachus vitellinus | Mid-eastern Queensland, Australia | 1985 | 2002 (IUCN) | Undetermined, possibly chytridiomycosis.[494] |
Alaotra grebe | Tachybaptus rufolavatus | Lake Alaotra, Madagascar | 1985 (confirmed) 1988 (unconfirmed) |
2010 (IUCN) | Hunting, accidental capture in nylon gillnets, predation and competition with introduced largemouth bass, striped snakehead, and Tilapia; habitat degradation from agriculture, and hybridization with the little grebe.[495] |
Pass stubfoot toad | Atelopus senex | Central Costa Rica | 1986 | 2020 (IUCN) | Possibly chytridiomycosis or climate change.[496] |
Zanzibar leopard | Panthera pardus adersi | Unguja Island, Tanzania | 1986 (confirmed) 2018 (unconfirmed) |
Extermination campaign.[236] The subspecies has been subsumed into the extant African leopard on morphological grounds.[497] | |
Eastern Canary Islands chiffchaff | Phylloscopus canariensis exsul | Lanzarote and Fuerteventura?, Canary Islands | 1986 | Habitat loss?[54] | |
Banff longnose dace | Rhinichthys cataractae smithi | Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada | 1986 | 1987 | Habitat degradation, competition and hybridization with introduced fishes.[498] |
Dusky seaside sparrow | Ammospiza maritima nigrescens | Merritt Island and the St. Johns River, Florida, United States | 1980 (wild) 1987 (captive) |
1990 | Flooding and draining of marshes to reduce mosquito population.[499] |
Cuban ivory-billed woodpecker | Campephilus principalis bairdii | Cuba | 1987 (confirmed) 1998 (unconfirmed) |
Habitat loss.[399] | |
Kauaʻi ʻōʻō | Moho braccatus | Kauaʻi, Hawaii, United States | 1987 | 2000 (IUCN) | Habitat loss and introduced black rats, pigs, and disease-carrying mosquitos. The last female was killed by Hurricane Iwa during the 1982-1983 El Niño event.[500] |
Maui ʻakepa | Loxops ochraceus | Maui, Hawaii, United States | 1988 | Undetermined.[501] | |
Bachman's warbler | Vermivora bachmanii | Southeastern United States and Cuba | 1988[502] | Habitat destruction from swampland draining and sugarcane agriculture.[503] | |
Golden toad | Incilius periglenes | Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve, Costa Rica | 1989 | 2020 (IUCN) | Anthropogenic global warming, chytridiomycosis, and airborne pollution.[504] |
Jamaican golden swallow | Tachycineta euchrysea euchrysea | Jamaica | 1989 | Deforestation?[54] | |
Malabar large-spotted civet | Viverra civettina | Western Ghats, India | 1989 | Possibly deforestation, hunting, and predation by domestic dogs.[505] |
1990s
- A Chiriqui harlequin frog, one of several recent amphibian extinctions.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Magdalena tinamou | Crypturellus erythropus saltuarius | Magdalena River Valley, Colombia | 1943 (wild, confirmed) 1990-2000 (captive) 2008 (wild, unconfirmed) |
Undetermined.[54] | |
Baolan | Barbodes baoulan | Lake Lanao, Mindanao, Philippines | 1991 | 2020 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced fishes.[506] |
Splendid poison frog | Oophaga speciosa | Western Panama | 1992 | 2020 (IUCN) | Chytridiomycosis.[507] |
Moroccan bustard | Ardeotis arabs lynesi | Western Morocco | 1993 | Undetermined.[54] | |
Aguijan reed warbler | Acrocephalus nijoi | Aguijan, Mariana Islands | c. 1995 | 2000-2009 | Habitat destruction.[54] |
Maui nukupu'u | Hemignathus affinis | Maui, Hawaii, United States | 1995[54] | Undetermined. | |
Chiriqui harlequin frog | Atelopus chiriquiensis | Talamanca-Chiriqui mountains, Costa Rica | 1996 | Chytridiomycosis.[508] | |
Norfolk Island boobook | Ninox novaeseelandiae undulata | Norfolk Island, Australia | 1996 | Deforestation leading to increased competition for nest-hollows with honeybees and crimson rosellas. Descendants of hybrids with the New Zealand subspecies survive in the island.[54] | |
Barbary leopard | Panthera pardus panthera | Atlas Mountains | 1996 | Hunting.[236] The subspecies has been subsumed into the extant African leopard on morphological grounds.[497] | |
Swollen Raiatea Tree Snail | Partula turgida | Raiatea, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1992 (wild) 1996 (captive) |
1996 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced rosy wolfsnails.[509] |
Green and red venter harlequin toad | Atelopus pinangoi | Mérida, Venezuela | 1997 | Chytridiomicosis, habitat destruction, and predation by introduced trout.[510] | |
Sangihe dwarf kingfisher | Ceyx fallax sangirensis | Sangihe Islands, Indonesia | 1997 | Habitat destruction.[54] | |
Iberian lynx louse | Felicola isidoroi | Iberian Peninsula | 1997 | Undetermined.[511] |
3rd millennium CE
2000s
- "Qiqi", the last captive Chinese river dolphin, which died in 2002.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pyrenean ibex | Capra pyrenaica pyrenaica | Pyrenees;[274] Cantabrian Mountains?[512] |
2000 (briefly cloned in 2003) |
2000 (IUCN)[513] | Hunting, competition for pastures and diseases from exotic and domestic ungulates.[514][515] |
Glaucous macaw | Anodorhynchus glaucus | Border area of Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil, and Uruguay | 2001 | Deforestation for agriculture and livestock grazing, particularly of the Yatay palm in which it fed.[516] | |
Polynesian tree snail | Partula labrusca | Raiatea, Society Islands, French Polynesia | 1992 (wild) 2002 (captive) |
2007 (IUCN) | Predation by introduced rosy wolfsnails.[517] |
Saint Helena olive | Nesiota elliptica | Saint Helena | 1994 (wild) 2003 (captive) |
2004 (IUCN) | Deforestation for fuel and timber, and use of the land for plantations of New Zealand flax, leading to inbreeding depression and fungal infections from reduced numbers.[518] |
Chinese paddlefish | Psephurus gladius | Yangtze and Yellow River basins, China | 2003 | 2019 (IUCN)[519] | Overfishing; construction of the Gezhouba and Three Gorges dams, causing population fragmentation and blocking the anadromous spawning migration. |
Chinese river dolphin | Lipotes vexillifer | Middle and lower Yangtze, China | 2002 (captive) 2007-2018 (wild, unconfirmed) |
2007[520] | Hunting, increased pollution and naval traffic, and habitat loss including as a result of the construction of the Three Gorges Dam. |
Po'ouli | Melamprosops phaeosoma | Eastern Maui, Hawaii, United States | 2004 | 2019 (IUCN) | Introduced avian malaria and predators.[521] |
Western black rhinoceros | Diceros bicornis longipes | South Sudan to Nigerian-Niger border area | 2006 | 2011 (IUCN) | Hunting.[522] |
South Island kōkako | Callaeas cinereus | South Island, New Zealand | 2007 (confirmed) 2018 (unconfirmed) |
Habitat destruction from logging and grazing ungulates, and predation by introduced black rats, brush-tailed possums, and stoats.[523] | |
Bramble Cay melomys | Melomys rubicola | Bramble Cay, Australia | 2009 | 2015 (IUCN)[524] | Sea level rise as a consequence of global warming.[525] |
Christmas Island pipistrelle | Pipistrellus murrayi | Christmas Island, Australia | 2009 | 2017 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[526] |
2010s
- "Lonesome George", the last full-blooded Pinta Island tortoise, photographed in 2006.
Common name | Binomial name | Former range | Last record | Declared extinct | Causes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Vietnamese rhinoceros | Rhinoceros sondaicus annamiticus | South China and Indochina | 2010 | 2011 | Hunting.[527] |
Alagoas foliage-gleaner | Philydor novaesi | Alagoas and Pernambuco, Brazil | 2011 | 2019 (IUCN) | Deforestation.[54] |
Pinta Island tortoise | Chelonoidis abingdonii | Pinta, Galápagos Islands, Ecuador | 1971 (wild) 2012 (captive) |
2012 (IUCN)[528] | Hunting and overgrazing by introduced goats. Hybrid descendants of this species still exist in other Galapagos islands, as a result of human action.[529] |
Christmas Island forest skink | Emoia nativitatis | Christmas Island, Australia | 2008 (wild) 2014 (captive) |
2017 (IUCN) | Undetermined.[530] |
Rabbs' fringe-limbed treefrog | Ecnomiohyla rabborum | El Valle de Antón, Panama | 2008 (wild) 2016 (captive) |
Chytridiomycosis.[531] | |
Oahu treesnail | Achatinella apexfulva | Oahu, Hawaii, United States | 1997 (wild) 2019 (captive) |
Predation by introduced rosy wolfsnails.[532] |
See also
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