PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Extinction rates have slowed across many plant and animal groups, study shows

The research also revealed that the patterns and causes of these past extinctions differed from current and future threats, making it problematic to extrapolate them into the future

2025-10-22
(Press-News.org) Prominent research studies have suggested that our planet is currently experiencing another mass extinction, based on extrapolating extinctions from the past 500 years into the future and the idea that extinction rates are rapidly accelerating.

A new study by Kristen Saban and John Wiens with the University of Arizona Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, however, revealed that over the last 500 years extinctions in plants, arthropods and land vertebrates peaked about 100 years ago and have declined since then. Furthermore, the researchers found that the past extinctions underlying these forecasts were mostly caused by invasive species on islands and are not the most important current threat, which is the destruction of natural habitats.  

The paper argues that claims of a current mass extinction may rest on shaky assumptions when projecting data from past extinctions into the future, ignoring differences in factors driving extinctions in the past, the present and the future. Published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, the paper is the first study to analyze rates, patterns and causes of recent extinctions across plant and animal species.

For their study, Saban and Wiens analyzed rates and patterns of recent extinctions, specifically across 912 species of plants and animals that went extinct over the past 500 years. All in all, data from almost 2 million species were included in the analysis.

"We discovered that the causes of those recent extinctions were very different from the threats species are currently facing," said Wiens, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology. "This makes it problematic to extrapolate these past extinction patterns into the future, because the drivers are rapidly changing, particularly with respect to habitat loss and climate change."

According to Saban and Wiens, the most direct information on species losses comes from recent extinctions over the past five centuries. However, studies extrapolating these patterns into the future generally assume that recent extinctions predict current extinction risk and are homogeneous among groups, over time and among environments, the authors argue.

"To our surprise, past extinctions are weak and unreliable predictors of the current risk that any given group of animals or plants is facing," said lead author Saban, who recently graduated from the U of A and is currently a doctoral student at Harvard University.

Extinction rates varied strongly among groups, and extinctions were most frequent among mollusks, such as snails and mussels, and vertebrates, but relatively rare among plants and arthropods. Most extinctions were of species that were confined to isolated islands, like the Hawaiian Islands. On continents, most extinctions were in freshwater habitats. Island extinctions were most frequently related to invasive species, but habitat loss was the most important cause (and current threat) in continental regions. Many species appeared to go extinct on islands because of predators and competitors brought by humans, such as rats, pigs and goats.

Somewhat unexpectedly, the researchers found that in the last 200 years, there was no evidence for increasing extinction from climate change.

"That does not mean that climate change is not a threat," Wiens said. "It just means that past extinctions do not reflect current and future threats."

The authors also considered threat levels – for example "threatened," "endangered" or "least concern," – for 163,000 species as assessed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

"The current threat level provides probably our best hint of what is currently happening and might happen in the near future," Wiens said. "We found the patterns of today's threats to be different from those of past extinctions. For example, most extinct species are mollusks and vertebrates on islands that were driven extinct by invasive species, but most threatened species today are mainland species facing habitat destruction."

Saban said she doesn't want the study "to be taken as giving people a carte blanche" to suggest that human activity does not present a significant and urgent threat to many species.

"Biodiversity loss is a huge problem right now, and I think we have not yet seen the kinds of effects that it might have," she said. "But it's important that we talk about it with accuracy, that our science is rigorous in how we're able to detail these losses and prevent future ones."

Contrary to many studies, the rates at which species are going extinct are not rapidly accelerating, the study found.

"We show that extinction rates are not getting faster towards the present, as many people claim, but instead peaked many decades ago," Wiens said.

For some groups, such as arthropods and plants and land vertebrates, extinction rates have actually declined over the last 100 years, notably since the early 1900s, he added. One of the reasons for declining extinction rates "is many people are working hard to keep species from going extinct. And we have evidence from other studies that investing money in conservation actually works."

According to Saban, the study was born out of a motivation to take a step back from doomsday scenarios.

"If we're saying that what is happening right now is like an asteroid hitting Earth, then the problem becomes insurmountable," she said. "By looking at the data in this way, we hope that our study helps inform our overall understanding of biodiversity loss and how we can come up with better ways to address it."

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Tiny fossil bone helps unlock history of the bowerbird

2025-10-22
The discovery of a tiny foot bone millions of years old reveals Aotearoa New Zealand was once home to a songbird species with potentially unique courtship behaviours, new research shows. These days bowerbirds are only found in Australia and New Guinea but an international collaboration by the University of Otago – Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka, the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and the University of Cambridge shows they may have resided in Aotearoa 14-19 million years ago. The foot bone that was found in the St Bathans, Central Otago, fossil deposits bore a close similarity to bowerbirds, though belonged to a bird that was much smaller than living species. Co-author Associate ...

AI tool beats humans at detecting parasites in stool samples, Utah study finds

2025-10-22
Scientists at ARUP Laboratories have developed an artificial intelligence (AI) tool that detects intestinal parasites in stool samples more quickly and accurately than traditional methods, potentially transforming how labs diagnose parasitic infections around the world. Identifying parasites under the microscope has long been a painstaking task requiring highly trained experts to manually scour each sample for telltale cysts, eggs or larva. Now, a deep-learning model, known as a convolutional neural network (CNN), achieves that work with a high degree ...

Innovative biochar research to boost circular economy: Join live talk by Prof. Salah Jellali on October 29

2025-10-22
On Wednesday, October 29 at 14:00 (Beijing Time), environmental engineering expert Prof. Salah Jellali from Sultan Qaboos University, Oman, will present his pioneering work on nutrient-enriched biochar — a sustainable solution that transforms agricultural residues and industrial byproducts into powerful, slow-release eco-fertilizers. Unlike conventional biochar, which lacks essential nutrients, Prof. Jellali’s innovation leverages nutrient-rich wastewater and mineral waste streams to “supercharge” biochar, creating a high-performance soil enhancer that improves crop yields while closing ...

Early life sugar restriction linked to lasting heart benefits in adulthood

2025-10-22
Restricted sugar intake during early life is linked to lower risks of several heart conditions in adulthood, including heart attack, heart failure, and stroke, finds a study published by The BMJ today using data from the end of UK sugar rationing in 1953.   The greatest protection against the risk of developing heart problems - and the longest delay in disease onset - was seen in people whose sugar intake was restricted from conception (“in utero”) to around 2 years of age.   Evidence ...

The Lancet: Study confirms cardiovascular benefits of semaglutide beyond weight loss

2025-10-22
A new analysis of the SELECT trial – the largest and longest clinical trial to date examining the cardiovascular benefits of semaglutide (a medication used to support weight loss and diabetes management) – confirms it also lowers the risk of major heart problems in people who are overweight or obese and already have heart disease, even if they don’t have diabetes. Importantly, this heart protection happens regardless of how much weight a person loses or their baseline body weight, according to the new study, published in The Lancet. The SELECT trial originally studied over 17,000 adults with heart disease and a body mass index (BMI) of ...

‘Weight loss’ drug helps heart regardless of amount of weight lost

2025-10-22
Anti-obesity medication semaglutide may help to prevent heart attacks and other major cardiac events regardless of how much weight people lose while taking the drug, according to a new study led by a UCL researcher. The finding, the researchers say, suggests there are multiple ways the drug benefits the heart, rather than its protective effect on cardiovascular health being due solely to weight loss. The study, published in the Lancet journal and funded by Novo Nordisk, looked at data from 17,604 people aged 45 and over who were overweight and had cardiovascular disease, who were randomly assigned either ...

First truly global picture of wide inequalities in care for women’s cancers

2025-10-22
Largest-ever analysis of data on stage, treatment and consistency with international clinical guidelines, from over 275,000 women diagnosed with breast, cervical or ovarian cancer during 2015-2018 in 39 countries For breast and cervical cancer, 40% of women in high-income countries had their cancer detected at an early stage, compared with below 20% for women in low- and middle-income countries Ovarian cancer is least likely to be diagnosed early across the world, at less than 20% Three-quarters (78%) of women in HICs and more than half (56%) of women in LMICs were offered surgery, but international clinical guidelines were not followed ...

International Consortium of Women’s Mental Health Experts present scientific evidence to support classification of postpartum psychosis as a distinct disease

2025-10-22
An international panel of leading experts on women’s mental health is recommending that postpartum psychosis be recognized as a distinct category of mental illness and classified accordingly within standardized medical coding systems. The recommendation, known as a “consensus statement,” and a comprehensive review of the scientific literature on postpartum psychosis appear in the October 22 issue of Biological Psychiatry. [DOI: /10.1016/j.biopsych.2025.10.016] Postpartum psychosis is an acute and severe psychiatric illness that sets in within weeks after delivery. ...

PET imaging of inflammation predicts recovery, guides therapy after heart attack

2025-10-22
Reston, VA (October 21, 2025)--A new approach to PET imaging offers a promising way for physicians to promptly identify patients who are at risk for poor functional recovery after a heart attack, according to new research published in The Journal of Nuclear Medicine. By visualizing CXCR4--a cellular protein that plays key role in inflammation--this technique can enable the timely implementation of treatments to mitigate inflammation and prevent heart failure progression. Heart attack, also known as acute myocardial ...

Pennington Biomedical awarded renewal of NIH-funded Center to Advance Metabolic Disease Research and train future scientists

2025-10-22
Following a competitive review process, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding for Pennington Biomedical’s Metabolic Basis of Disease Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) was renewed for an additional five years. This Phase II renewal builds on the momentum achieved since the center’s establishment in 2020, enabling continued support for young scientists who are focused on the mechanisms through which nutrition and metabolism contribute to health. “The renewal of this center grant provides Pennington Biomedical with the opportunity to continue a metabolic ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Traffic noise joins land clearance as damaging to bird survival

Innovative online monitoring system for farmland non-point source pollution enables automated monitoring of continuous cropping farmland

Stabilized fertilizers improve nitrogen use efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions

Endangered Kangaroo Island ground dweller found in trees

Guardians of the coast: Philippine scientists unlock the climate power of mangroves in Eastern Visayas

Nano-biochar helps rice roots turn silver ions into less toxic nanoparticles

New ‘liquid metal’ composite material enables recyclable, flexible and reconfigurable electronics

Extinction rates have slowed across many plant and animal groups, study shows

Tiny fossil bone helps unlock history of the bowerbird

AI tool beats humans at detecting parasites in stool samples, Utah study finds

Innovative biochar research to boost circular economy: Join live talk by Prof. Salah Jellali on October 29

Early life sugar restriction linked to lasting heart benefits in adulthood

The Lancet: Study confirms cardiovascular benefits of semaglutide beyond weight loss

‘Weight loss’ drug helps heart regardless of amount of weight lost

First truly global picture of wide inequalities in care for women’s cancers

International Consortium of Women’s Mental Health Experts present scientific evidence to support classification of postpartum psychosis as a distinct disease

PET imaging of inflammation predicts recovery, guides therapy after heart attack

Pennington Biomedical awarded renewal of NIH-funded Center to Advance Metabolic Disease Research and train future scientists

Planetary scientists link Jupiter’s birth to Earth’s formation zone

University of Louisville, UofL Health receive $11.5 million to develop new cancer immunotherapies

Survey: Californians don’t know cannabis driving laws

Gum disease and cavities linked to increased stroke risk

Gum disease associated with changes in the brain

Brian Cleary awarded $2.25 million NIH grant to advance single-cell gene expression research

Gut parasites identified from feces of ancient Mexican people

Remission achievable for 1 in 3 Indian diabetics through intensive app-based lifestyle program

Idiopathic hypersomnia is a rare disease of excessive sleepiness, with patients revealing they never feel rested or awake no matter how much sleep they get, in analysis of online posts

Backyard birders in South Africa may continue to enjoy biodiversity in visiting birds under climate change scenarios, while climate change and declining biodiversity may decrease birding in protected

Ingestible pill developed to diagnose intestinal disorder

‘Chronic lung-transplant rejection has been a black box.’ New study gives answers, drug targets.

[Press-News.org] Extinction rates have slowed across many plant and animal groups, study shows
The research also revealed that the patterns and causes of these past extinctions differed from current and future threats, making it problematic to extrapolate them into the future