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				 In 
				the latest update of its closely watched Red List of threatened 
				species, the environmental group also moved Australia's western 
				ringtail possum by two notches from "vulnerable" to "critically 
				endangered". 
				 
				The re-evaluation of the status of the two aquatic mammals comes 
				after the numbers of Irrawaddy dolphin more than halved over the 
				past 60 years, and over the past 45 years for the finless 
				porpoise, the group said. 
				 
				"These species live in shallow waters near shore and both have 
				populations confined to freshwater systems, and that makes them 
				extremely vulnerable to human activities," Craig Hilton-Taylor, 
				head of the group's Red List unit, told reporters. 
				 
				"In the Mekong River, for example, the majority of Irrawaddy 
				dolphin deaths in recent years have been caused by entanglement 
				in gill nets. These nets hang like curtains of deaths across the 
				river," he said. 
				 
				As for western ringtail possums, Australia's increasingly dry 
				and hot climate had led to a decline of more than 80 percent in 
				their numbers over the past decade, the group said. 
				 
				"The threats pushing species to extinction come from us, from 
				humans ... This also means that we can do something about it," 
				Hilton-Taylor said. 
				 
				(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Robert Birsel) 
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