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  Msg # 1958 of 2222 on ZZCA4347, Monday 7-14-24, 8:35  
  From: ABC  
  To: ALL  
  Subj: Canadian species among most threatened b  
 XPost: can.general, soc.culture.canada, soc.culture.canadian 
 From: abc@123.cl 
  
 Canadian species among most threatened by climate change: group. 
  
  
 December 14, 2009 
  
  
 Canada is home to five of the 10 new ``hit list'' species identified 
 Monday as the likeliest victims of climate change by the IUCN, a 
 leading global nature organization. 
  
 The International Union for Conservation of Nature, the world's largest 
 and oldest network of environmental scientists, has listed the Arctic 
 fox, leatherback turtle, beluga whale, salmon and ringed seal among 10 
 species ``destined to be hardest hit by climate change.'' 
  
 The study, released in Copenhagen to coincide with global climate 
 negotiations, notes that another Canadian icon - the polar bear - has 
 emerged as the poster species for the climate crisis, but that other 
 plants and animals around the planet are equally vulnerable. 
  
 ``The polar bear has come to symbolize the impacts of climate change on 
 the natural world,'' the IUCN report states. ``But it is only one of a 
 multitude of species affected, and many of these are also well-known, 
 much-loved and important to people.'' 
  
 The new ``flagship species'' placed in the spotlight were ``chosen to 
 represent the impact that climate change is likely to have on land and 
 in our oceans and rivers.'' 
  
 The Canadian animals listed in the report - titled ``Species and 
 Climate Change: More Than Just the Polar Bear'' - cover all three 
 coastal regions of the country. Leatherback turtles are the focus of a 
 conservation campaign in Atlantic Canada; salmon are an important 
 commercial fish on both the east and west coasts; the beluga ranges 
 widely in the country's Arctic and sub-Arctic marine habitats - as well 
 as the Gulf of St. Lawrence - and the Arctic fox and ringed seal occupy 
 important niches in the northern food web. 
  
 In detailing the risks faced by the Arctic fox, the IUCN highlighted 
 the transition of tundra habitat to less suitable boreal forest, 
 competition from northward-moving red foxes and declines in traditional 
 prey. 
  
 The study also notes how complex interrelationships between vulnerable 
 species could affect populations in a domino-like fashion. 
  
 ``Because polar bears and ringed seals are expected to decline due to 
 climate change,'' the report states, the Arctic fox's ``coastal 
 populations are likely to face reductions in alternative food sources 
 such as ringed seal pups and the remains of polar bear prey.'' 
  
 The five other species cited in the IUCN report are the staghorn coral 
 of the world's southern seas, Antarctica's emperor penguins, southern 
 Africa's quiver tree, the tropical clown fish and Australia's koala. 
  
 ``Humans are not the only ones whose fate is at stake here in 
 Copenhagen - some of our favourite species are also taking the fall for 
 our CO2 emissions,'' report co-author Wendy Foden, an IUCN climate 
 change program officer, said in a statement. 
  
 ``This report should act as a wake-up call to governments to make real 
 commitments to cut CO2 emissions if we are to avoid a drastically 
 changed natural world. We simply don't have the time for drawn-out 
 political wrangling. We need strong commitments and we need them now.'' 
  
 --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05 
  * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2) 

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