The report, authored by scientists at
Stanford, Princeton and Berkeley universities, found that
vertebrates were vanishing at a rate 114 times faster than
normal.In the damning report,
published in the Science Advances journal, researchers
note that the last similar event was 65 million years ago,
when dinosaurs disappeared, most probably as a result of an
asteroid.
"We are now entering
the sixth great mass extinction event," one of the authors
of the paper
told the BBC.
Gerardo Ceballos, lead author of the
research, added: "If it is allowed to continue, life would
take many millions of years to recover and our species
itself would likely disappear early on"
The research examined historic rates of
extinction for vertebrates, finding that since 1900 more
than 400 vertebrates have disappeared – an extinction rate
100 times higher than in other – non-extinction – periods.
"There are examples of species all over
the world that are essentially the walking dead,” said
Stanford University professor Paul Ehrlich.
He added: "We are sawing off the limb that
we are sitting on."
The research, which cites climate change,
pollution and deforestation as causes for the rapid change,
notes that a knock-on effect of the loss of entire
ecosystems could be dire.
As our ecosystems unravel,
the Centre for Biological Diversity has noted that we
could face a “snowball” effect whereby individual species
extinction ultimately fuels more losses.
The report, which builds on findings
published by Duke University last year, does note that
averting this loss is “still possible through intensified
conservation effects,” but that “window of opportunity is
rapid closing.”