Wildlife experts are calling the recovery of the Iberian Lynx
unparalleled among felines in an age of extinction in which
species are vanishing at a rate not seen in 10 million years due
to climate change, pollution and habitat loss.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature, which
categorizes species according to the level of risk they face in
a "Red List" produced several times a year, bumped up the
Iberian Lynx from "endangered" to "vulnerable" on Thursday.
While the Iberian Lynx shares the yellow eyes and short black
stumpy tail with other lynx species, it is much smaller than
them and has a distinctive black "beard" of long hair around its
chin.
There were just 62 adults scattered across Mediterranean forests
in 2001 but the population jumped to around 648 in 2022, IUCN
said. Today, the population has risen to more than 2,000,
counting both young and adult lynxes across a range of thousands
of kilometers covering rocky mountainous areas and valleys.
Francisco Javier Salcedo Ortiz, Coordinator of the LIFE
Lynx-Connect project, which led the conservation action for the
Iberian lynx called it "the greatest recovery of a cat species
ever achieved through conservation" and praised a range of
actors including landowners, farmers, hunters and the European
Union which provided financial and logistical support.
Efforts have focused on increasing the abundance of its prey, a
species of wild rabbit which is also endangered, programs to
free hundreds of captive lynxes and restoring scrublands and
forests. However, IUCN warned that gains could be reversed and
said that threats included diseases from domestic cats and among
the European rabbit population it feeds on as well as poaching
and road kill.
IUCN is set to produce its broader Red List update which serves
as a barometer of biodiversity next week.
(Reporting by Emma Farge; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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