Top 10 ANIMALS That Are No Longer ENDANGERED
These days, it's easy to feel like the world is a depressing place where nothing good ever
happens.
Bombs explode, wars trundle on, politics gets more polarized, and the future looks as black
as can be.
No wonder we wake up each morning reaching for the Xanax.
But not everything has to be a non-stop horror show of mind-numbing misery.
In the shadows of the natural world, far away from where headline writers' prying eyes
can glimpse them, a number of animals have been undergoing a remarkable resurgence.
Even as we devastate the environment in places like Indonesia and China, we humans have gradually
been helping select species tiptoe back from the edge of extinction.
Desperately need proof that not everything is doom and gloom?
Look no further.
10.
The Giant Panda (No Longer Endangered: 2016)
The giant panda is the poster boy for endangered animals.
Literally.
The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) use an image of a panda in their logo.
Know what else the giant panda is?
Not even close to going extinct.
As of September 2016, the most-famous endangered animal on the planet is no longer actually
endangered.
When the WWF first picked the panda for their logo in 1961, the species had nearly vanished.
Although a handful of wild pandas remained, they were so rare conservations had no idea
how many were actually left.
It took decades to reverse their decline.
First, poaching had to be cracked down on, before some douchenozzle hunter could blow
away the last panda in the hope of making a quick buck.
Second, a whole load of wildlife reserves had to be set up to protect their habitat.
China today has 67 panda reserves, protecting 14,000 square kilometers of habitat.
Thanks to all this effort, panda populations have been growing at an encouraging rate.
By 2004, there were around 1,500 living in the wild.
Fast forward to today, and that number is over 2,000.
While the giant panda is still on the 'vulnerable' list, it is thankfully no longer teetering
on the brink of extinction.
9.
Chatham Petrel (No Longer Endangered: 2015)
90 percent of you just saw the name 'Chatham Petrel' and said something along the lines
of "Whaaaaaa?"
The remaining ten percent are from New Zealand and know exactly what we're talking about.
A bird species native to the remote Chatham Islands, an archipelago some 650 kilometers
east of Wellington, the petrel is found nowhere else on Earth.
And that's a problem, because the Chatham Islands have a new kid on the block: the broad
billed prion.
If you don't know the prion already, it's the kind of hipster-bird that likes to rock
up in a neighborhood, scoop up all the affordable property, and probably open a craft beer joint
or two.
But while human hipsters doing this merely breed resentment, the prion leaves the petrel
nowhere else to go but the grave.
With its nesting sites stolen, the petrel dies.
It dies so hard that, in 1995, its population numbers dropped to a mere 600.
Thankfully, New Zealand's birders are nothing if not inventive.
Faced with this looming petrelgeddon, they simply gathered the birds up, took them to
a new island without prions, and left them there to get on with it.
As of 2015, the petrel's numbers were sufficiently restored to downgrade it from endangered to
vulnerable.
8.
Louisiana Black Bear (No Longer Endangered: 2015)
It's not often that we celebrate the survival of a murder machine that could tear us limb
from limb, but the Louisiana Black Bear is different.
For one thing, it's a unique subspecies that's celebrated as the state animal.
For another, it also gave us a template for children's plush toys for decades to come.
The Louisiana Black Bear is where we got the name "teddy bear" from.
This is thanks to a now largely-forgotten incident involving President Theodore Roosevelt.
In 1902, Roosevelt decided he was gonna shoot a black bear in rural Mississippi.
Roping in an expert bear killer named Holt Collier, who had killed over 3,000 bears,
the President set off on a hunt that lasted a stupid amount of time.
With Roosevelt unable to find a bear, his assistants eventually got hold of an injured
one, tied it to a tree, and invited the President to shoot it.
Roosevelt refused, saying it was unsportsmanlike.
When news of the incident reached the capitol, a cartoonist for the Washington Post drew
an image of the President refusing to shoot an adorable, fluffy little creature.
The public went nuts for the image, leading to sales of toys based on it.
The teddy bear was born.
Nonetheless, the Louisiana bear itself nearly went extinct.
In 1992, only 150 remained in the wild.
Two decades of conservation efforts have since boosted the population to over 700.
7.
Delmarva Peninsula Fox Squirrel (No Longer Endangered: 2015)
In 1967, the Federal Government passed something known as the Endangered Species Preservation
Act.
The first legislation of its kind in the US, the act required states to list animals in
danger of dying out and make some kind of effort to save them.
Consisting of 77 animals, the original list read like a roll call of the nearly-dead and
dying of America's fauna.
Near the very top of it sat the Delmarva Peninsula fox squirrel.
A large gray squirrel, the fox squirrel had been led to the brink of extinction by intense
logging and overhunting.
By the time it was protected in 1967, its range had dropped to 10 percent of what it
had once been.
Its survival chances weren't helped by the fact that its habitat was almost entirely
on private land, and stretched over 3 different states (Maryland, Delaware and Virginia).
If there's one thing harder than herding cats, it's getting home owners in three
different states to turn their lives upside down just to save a tree-based rodent.
Yet that's exactly what happened.
After nearly five decades of concerted effort, fox squirrel numbers had bloomed to over 20,000.
They now inhabit 28 percent of the peninsula, and are expanding all the time.
6.
Steller Sea Lion (No Longer Endangered: 2013)
On the cold, rocky shores of western Alaska, lives one of America's greatest native creatures.
The Steller Sea Lion is a huge beast, a gigantic mess of blubber and fur bigger and blubberier
than even yo momma.
Able to range down as far as central California – a distance we decided is best expressed
as a lot – it's a species that is impressive in every sense of the word.
Yet it wasn't always this way.
As recently as 1990, the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) was convinced
the steller sea lion was about to go extinct.
At the time, the Steller Sea Lion population had been hit hard by centuries of hunting,
repeated environmental disasters, and crashes with trawler ships (which hit them hard enough
to turn them into mulch).
It also seemed unlikely they'd ever recover.
When an animal lands on the NOAA Fisheries endangered list, it generally only comes off
by actually going extinct.
Prior to 2013, only one species had ever recovered enough to be removed, when the North Pacific
gray whale unexpectedly bounced back in 1994.
Well, to that small list, we can now add the Steller Sea Lion.
In 1979, there were only 18,000 left.
By 2010, there were over 70,000.
With the population growing by over 4% each year, it seems likely that the Steller Sea
Lion has now been permanently saved from extinction.
5.
Arabian Oryx (No Longer Endangered: 2011)
The Arabian Oryx has the dubious distinction of being the only animal on our list to have
actually gone extinct.
In 1972, some nameless jerk took his rifle and shot the last one, killing the entire
species stone dead.
And that was it for the grand, stately beast that had once ruled the vast desert wastes
of the Arabian peninsula.
Or, at least, it should have been.
But, for once, fate was smiling on a dying species.
As the population dwindled, a few ultra-rich princes in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Abu Dhabi
had taken a handful of the beasts to keep as curiosities in their royal collections.
At the time, this probably seemed like a total douche move to those trying to preserve the
wild population.
But with all wild oryx dead, having a few spare in captivity no longer seemed such a
bad idea.
In 1982, Oman created a special reserve to get these oryx breeding again.
Fast forward to today, and there are now over 1,000 oryx living in the wild.
It probably helped that the oryx was a symbol of ancient significance on the Arabian peninsula.
Long used for their ability to smell water from several kilometers away, it was seen
as a matter of regional pride to revive the noble creature.
We doubt this would've been the case if it had been the Arabian Fartworm that wound
up going extinct.
4.
Lake Erie Water Snake (No Longer Endangered: 2011)
The turnaround in the fortunes of the Lake Erie Water Snake is nothing short of incredible.
In 1999, it was considered so endangered that the US Fish and Wildlife Service listed it
as on the brink of extinction.
By 2011, a mere 12 years later, its population had rebounded enough to remove it from the
list altogether.
That's such a crazy-quick recovery that we almost feel like a mistake must've been
made somewhere.
Native to Lake Erie (duh), the Lake Erie water snake has the double-misfortune of living
near wasteful humans, and looking like a nightmare monster that people instinctively want to
kill.
Honestly, the number one reason the FWS listed for its plummeting population was humans seeing
it, freaking out, and killing it with anything they had to hand.
Yet, despite looking like something that comes crawling out a newly-opened vault in the final
act of a horror film, the Lake Erie water snake is actually pretty harmless.
Just don't go putting anything dangling and sensitive in their mouths and you should
be fine.
3.
Gray Wolf (No Longer Endangered: 2011)
So now we come to probably the most-controversial cast member in our little eco-review, the
North American gray wolf.
A proud creature that roams the back forests of the USA, the gray wolf was placed on the
endangered list way back in the 1970s, and stayed there for the next 35 years.
In 2011, the US FWS announced that the wolf had rebounded, with over 5,500 now living
in the contiguous United States.
It was at this point that things really began to heat up.
The declassification of the gray wolf was contingent on the FWS reclassifying eastern
gray wolves as a separate species.
However, a scientific study claimed that there was no evidence to back this up.
Things grew quite heated; to the extent that an argument about species sub-classifications
can ever be said to get heated (like, we're pretty sure blows weren't exchanged).
This scientific spat aside, it's beyond doubt that the gray wolf has seen something
of a resurgence.
Once hunted almost to extinction, they are now finally creeping back into the forests
of the USA.
2.
Brown Pelican (No Longer Endangered: 2009)
From the point of view of the Brown Pelican, the entire mid-20th century was little more
than a protracted attempt by human beings to kill all its relatives off as quickly as
possible.
As pesticides became more and more common in the US, farmers and government workers
began spraying just about everything that moved with DDT.
Harmful to humans, DDT was nothing short of an apocalypse for brown pelicans.
The poor birds ate poisoned fish, got sick, and died with alarming rapidity.
Those that survived started laying eggs with thin, useless shells.
These shells cracked at the slightest movement, killing the unborn chicks inside.
As a direct result of this global pesticide party, the brown pelican's population numbers
went into a tailspin.
By 1970, they were endangered.
Thankfully for humans and pelicans alike, the use of DDT became pretty taboo by the
mid-70s.
Eventually, the US banned it altogether, with the sole exception of using it to combat malaria.
Its habitat no longer coated with poisonous chemicals, the brown pelican was able to rebound.
Finally, in 2009, the FWS removed it from the endangered list altogether.
1.
Indian Rhino (No Longer Endangered: 2008)
A few centuries ago, life was looking pretty sweet for the Indian rhinoceros.
The great beast roamed the entire north of the subcontinent, from modern Pakistan to
Bangladesh, via Bhutan.
They numbered in the hundreds of thousands, if not the millions.
They were big, impressive, and seemingly unstoppable.
Then, in the early years of the 20th century, big game hunters decided they'd make perfect
trophies.
Within 70 years, this once-robust population had been reduced to a mere 600.
Come 1975, the rhino was extinct in Bangladesh and Bhutan, and going that way in India.
It was only by a phenomenal effort that the decline was stopped before they were wiped
out altogether.
Habitat protection and anti-hunting laws were beefed up, and heavy penalties brought in
for any poachers caught trying to bag themselves a rhino.
For a while, things were tough.
But, eventually, they began to improve.
By 2008, the rhino population was back at 3,000.
Not exactly staggering, but a heck of a lot better than 600.
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