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American Focus > Blog > Environment > The Extinctions We Watched Happen
Environment

The Extinctions We Watched Happen

Last updated: May 21, 2026 11:30 pm
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The Extinctions We Watched Happen
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On August 26, 2009, an Australian biologist’s audio detector captured the final echolocation call of the Christmas Island pipistrelle, a solitary bat navigating the rainforest canopy. This was the last time the species was heard.

Contents
The pipistrelle that nobody caught in timeLonesome George and the end of a lineageThe western black rhinoceros: poached outThe baiji: a dolphin lost in plain sightThe Bramble Cay melomys: the first mammal climate extinctionThe po’ouli: an extinction due to an absent partner

Extinction in the 21st century often happens with recorded evidence. We have audio of a bat’s last call, photos of the last individual animals, and names of endangered creatures like Lonesome George, Sudan, and Toughie. In many instances, we were aware of their impending loss well in advance.

Since 2000, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has officially listed numerous species as extinct or extinct in the wild, with hundreds more classified as critically endangered (possibly extinct). Below are some of the most documented cases, with clear causes.

The challenge remains whether humanity will learn from these extinctions to prevent future ones.

The pipistrelle that nobody caught in time

The Christmas Island pipistrelle, a microbat no larger than a thumb, experienced a population decline over two decades. By 2006, scientists estimated only a few dozen were left. The Australian government approved a captive-breeding program in 2009, but only one bat was found by the time crews arrived. After failing to catch it over four weeks, the IUCN declared the species extinct in 2017.

The extinction was not due to climate change or habitat loss, but rather a series of invasive species, including yellow crazy ants, feral cats, and an introduced wolf snake, exacerbated by a delayed government response. The pipistrelle’s extinction highlights the consequences of inaction, despite a viable rescue plan.

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Lonesome George and the end of a lineage

Lonesome George, the last known Pinta Island tortoise (Chelonoidis abingdonii), died on June 24, 2012, on Santa Cruz Island in the Galápagos. This subspecies was driven to extinction by 19th-century whalers and invasive goats. Efforts to breed George with related subspecies were unsuccessful.

His death was anticipated decades earlier, as he was discovered in 1971 as the last of his kind. George’s life posed the question of what it would take to save his lineage, and his extinction became one of the world’s most observed.

The western black rhinoceros: poached out

The western black rhinoceros was declared extinct in 2011 by the IUCN after a 2006 survey in Cameroon found none. This extinction was driven by the illegal horn trade, with prices reaching over $50,000 per kilogram. Poaching operations outmatched anti-poaching efforts leading to their demise.

The northern white rhinoceros is facing a similar fate. Sudan, the last male, was euthanized on March 19, 2018, and only two females remain. Efforts to revive the subspecies through IVF and stem-cell technology by BioRescue continue, but the wild northern white rhino is extinct.

The baiji: a dolphin lost in plain sight

The baiji, or Yangtze river dolphin, diverged from other cetaceans around 20 million years ago. A 2006 expedition along the Yangtze found no surviving individuals, declaring it functionally extinct. It was the first cetacean species lost due to human activity.

The extinction was caused by multiple human activities, including bycatch in fishing nets, habitat loss from dams, ship strikes, and pollution. The Yangtze finless porpoise, China’s last freshwater cetacean, faces similar threats.

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The Bramble Cay melomys: the first mammal climate extinction

The Bramble Cay melomys, a small rodent, lived on a five-acre coral cay in the Great Barrier Reef. Rising sea levels and increased storm surges destroyed its habitat and food supply. Last seen in 2009, it was declared extinct by the IUCN in 2015 and by the Australian government in 2019, marking the first mammal extinction attributed to climate change.

This extinction illustrates the vulnerability of low-elevation island species, a fate shared by many others.

The po’ouli: an extinction due to an absent partner

The po’ouli, a Hawaiian honeycreeper, was discovered in 1973. By 2003, only three individuals remained. In 2004, biologists captured the last male, but a mate was never found before he died on November 26, 2004.

Hawaii has lost more bird species than any other U.S. state, mainly due to avian malaria from introduced mosquitoes. As global warming allows mosquitoes to reach higher elevations, the remaining honeycreepers face dwindling habitats.

Tissue samples from the last po’ouli are preserved at San Diego Zoo’s Frozen Zoo, with cloning possibilities remaining a question for the future.

Extinction is not simply a tally of species lost and discovered. Each extinction also represents a loss of:

  • Evolutionary time. The baiji’s 20 million years of evolution cannot be recovered.
  • Ecosystem function. The melomys dispersed seeds, the pipistrelle controlled insect populations, and the rhino moved nutrients.
  • Cultural meaning. Lonesome George became a symbol, and the po’ouli held cultural significance in Hawaii. Extinction severs human-nature connections.
  • Possibility space. Unknown traits could have informed fields like medicine and conservation.

Six of the seven species discussed had known causes of extinction long before their disappearance, and potential interventions like captive breeding and habitat protection were identified. However, these measures were often initiated too late, inadequately funded, or hindered by competing interests.

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The lesson from post-2000 extinctions is that we are losing documented species, not unknown ones. The barrier is not a lack of knowledge.

The vaquita, a porpoise in Mexico’s Upper Gulf of California, tests our ability to learn from past extinctions. The 2025 monitoring effort recorded 7 to 10 individuals, including new calves, slightly more than 2024’s low count of eight.

Their decline is tied to illegal totoaba gillnets. The vaquita’s fate now depends on enforcement and political resolve, not scientific understanding.

While individual actions alone cannot prevent extinction, effective interventions are achievable through policies and supply chains, supported by public commitment:

  • Support large-scale habitat protection. Contribute to organizations like The Nature Conservancy, Rainforest Trust, and American Bird Conservancy that prioritize habitat preservation.
  • Advocate for stricter wildlife trade laws. Encourage legislative support for full funding of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s enforcement efforts and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
  • Reduce your climate impact effectively. Focus on home heating, transportation, and air travel.
  • Choose seafood from sources auditing gear and species. Bycatch, a significant threat, is tackled through improved fishing gear. Refer to the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch for guidance.
  • Vote on conservation budgets. Successful species rescues, such as the California condor’s, were backed by strong funding.

Editor’s Note: The upcoming installment of Environmental Losses will explore ecosystems that have significantly changed since 2000, such as coral reefs, kelp forests, and freshwater systems, and the implications of their loss.

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