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Coral naked tail mice are extinct: coral naked tail mice, a species extinct due to climate, recognize the importance of the environment

Published: 2024-11-05 Author: mysheen
Last Updated: 2024/11/05, If we do not properly protect the environment, there will be fewer and fewer animals in the world, and the environmental quality of people's life will become worse and worse. The Australian government recently confirmed that the coral naked tail mouse living in the Great Barrier Reef is believed to have become extinct between 2009 and 2014, becoming the first cause in the world.

If we do not properly protect the environment, there will be fewer and fewer animals in the world, and the environmental quality of people's life will become worse and worse. The Australian government has confirmed that the coral naked tail mouse living along the Great Barrier Reef is believed to have become extinct between 2009 and 2014, becoming the first mammal in the world to become extinct as a result of climate change. We should realize the seriousness of the environmental problem.

As early as 2016, the Queensland government quoted the study as saying that the coral naked tail rats living on a small sand island in the Torres Strait in northern Australia had become extinct, and the last time they were witnessed in 2009 was to no avail after a large-scale search in 2014; although scientists pointed out that animals of similar races may be found in neighboring Papua New Guinea, this is not for sure. Australian government documents say the extinction of coral naked rats is almost certainly the result of rising water and loss of habitat caused by human behavior in the past few decades, and it is also the first time in history that mammals have become extinct as a result of climate change.

Some experts have criticized that coral naked-tailed rats have been endangered for decades and there was a chance to prevent their extinction, but the authorities did not attach importance to the problem. It is learnt that although there was a rescue plan as early as 2008, however, it was accused of playing down the crisis they faced. Experts pointed out that this was due to the fact that the Government had not put in sufficient resources for conservation and only focused on assisting some of the more well-known animals. WWF has earlier warned that global warming will threaten 3,000 species of endangered wildlife around the world.

 
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