SYDNEY – The “Number of Living Species in Australia and the World” study found 0.9 per cent of the world’s 1.9 million classified species were at threat, including 9.2 per cent of major vertebrate species.
Australia’s government-funded Biological Resources Study, the world’s only census of animal and plant life, found 20.8 per cent of mammals were endangered, as were 12.2 per cent of birds and 29.2 per cent of amphibians.
Of reptiles, 4.8 per cent were considered threatened, along with 4.1 per cent of fish species.
“In Australia and around the world, biodiversity is under huge and growing pressure,” said environment department secretary Robyn Kruk.
“The pressures are pervasive and chronic in many places; invasive species, habitat loss and climate change in particular.”
Australia was found to be home to 7.8 per cent of the world’s known species. Environment Minister Peter Garrett said the study had shown its wildlife was highly unique, with 87 per cent of mammals and 93 per cent of reptiles found nowhere else in the world.
However, the study also showed Australian species accounted for 9.1 per cent of the world’s threatened flora and fauna, and Garrett said vigilance was essential.
“We have a long way to go, we have discovered and named only about a quarter of Australia’s estimated number of flora and fauna,” said Garrett.
“We need this essential information to do a better job of managing our biodiversity against the threats of invasive species, habitat-loss and climate change.”
According to the report there were likely to be some 11 million species on Earth of which only 1.9 million had been discovered, with millions of invertebrates, fungi and other organisms yet to be found and named.