Endangered species to get daily web spot in 2010

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)  said yesterday it would issue throughout the coming year an  extensive daily portrait of each of the 365 animals, birds and  plants most under threat of disappearance.

“It is time for governments to get serious about saving  species and making sure it is high on their agenda for next  year, as we’re really running out of time,” said Jane Smart, a  biodiversity expert at the Swiss-based IUCN.

“The scientific evidence of a serious extinction crisis is  mounting,” Smart said. A third of the some 1.8 million  identified species were under growing threat.

Experts believe there could be as many as 6 to 12 million  more species as yet unknown to science.

From Jan. 1 2010, declared the U.N. Year of Biodiversity,  IUCN will draw on latest research for its annual Red List of  endangered wildlife to portray in detail the possibly doomed  species of the day. The material will be posted on the IUCN website  (www.iucn.org).

“We will start with some better known species before moving  to cover plants, fungi, invertebrates, and more, including less  charismatic ones,” the inter-governmental body said.
The polar bear, whose fate as the arctic ice-shelf melts has  been widely recognised, will have star billing on Jan. 1.

Before December’s U.N. Climate Change Conference in  Copenhagen, IUCN said inaction would put the future of some of  the world’s best-known creatures at risk.

These also included the emperor penguin, the arctic fox,  clownfish which were popularised by the hit film “Finding Nemo”,  Australia’s koala bear and almost every species of salmon, both  marine and freshwater.