Lifestyle

Study reveals human activity is threatening 50 billion years of evolutionary history

Our human footprint–and the changes it has wrought–is threatening some of the most unique species on Earth, a new study reveals.

In research published in the journal Nature on Tuesday, researchers revealed that some of the most strange species on the planet, such as the shoebill, a huge bird that enjoys the wetlands of Africa and the aye-aye, a lemur with large yellow eyes, are the most threatened by human activity.

“These are some of the most incredible and overlooked animals on Planet Earth,” said phylogeneticist Rikki Gumbs from Imperial College London and The Zoological Society of London in a statement.

Researchers used the so-called Human Footprint index, according to the study, which combines eight different variables to measure direct human impacts on the environment, such as agricultural land, built environments and human population density.

A shoebill in Bangweulu, Zambia.
A shoebill in Bangweulu, Zambia.Alamy Stock Photo

“From legless lizards and tiny blind snakes to pink worm-like amphibians called caecilians, we know precious little about these fascinating creatures, many of which may be sliding silently toward extinction,” Gumbs said.

The scientists used extinction risk data for about 25,000 different species to calculate the full amount of evolutionary history threatened with extinction — they discovered at least 50 billion years of heritage is under threat.

The team of researchers also found that largest amounts of diverse evolutionary history are the ones facing the biggest threats from human activity, such as the Caribbean and large parts of Southeast Asia.

Co-author James Rosindell, from Imperial College London, explained: “Our findings highlight the importance of acting urgently to conserve these extraordinary species and the remaining habitat that they occupy — in the face of intense human pressures.”