Black rhino

The IUCN has just issued a Red List update for African rhinos. Black rhino numbers have steadily been increasing since 1995, so why are they still considered Critically Endangered?

Of the five living rhino species, three – the black, Sumatran and Javan rhinos – are classified as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. The Red List is maintained by IUCN, the World Conservation Union. “IUCN” stands for the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, the world’s first global environmental organization, founded in 1948. The world’s oldest and largest global environmental network, IUCN is a democratic membership union with more than 1,000 government and NGO member organizations, and almost 11,000 volunteer scientists and experts in some 160 countries. IUCN’s work is supported by more than 1,000 professional staff in 60 offices and hundreds of partners in public, NGO and private sectors around the world. IUCN’s headquarters are located in Gland, near Geneva, in Switzerland. Essentially, the IUCN functions as a “United Nations” for conservation.

Sumatran rhino

Critically Endangered is the most threatened conservation status assigned by IUCN to a species that still exists in the wild. Decreasing levels of threat are assigned to species classified as Endangered, Vulnerable, Near Threatened and Least Concern. Extinct in the Wild means that only captive populations remain, and Extinct, well … that’s obviously the end of the line. When a species is classified as Critically Endangered, the experts are telling us that it faces an extremely high risk of extinction. Key to this assessment is the status of the species’ remaining populations – their sizes, trends, extent of occurrence, degrees of fragmentation, numbers of locations, and numbers of mature individuals – all of which factor into the threat equation.

Category of threat is assigned based on more than just population numbers. The IUCN Categories of Threat were first developed and tested in the early 1990s, and the final criteria under which species are evaluated was adopted in 1994.

A number of factors can be used to determine level of threat, including:

Declining Population;

Small Distribution and two criteria pertaining to population decline, fluctuation, or fragmentation;

a small Population Size and a population decline;

a very small population; or

a quantitative analysis such as a Population Viability Analysis that demonstrates a very high probability of extinction.

Javan rhino, Photo by Stephen Belcher

If we take a closer look at the three Critically Endangered rhino species, we see stories that are somewhat different but have the unfortunate potential of similar endings if conservation actions aren’t successful. Black rhinos currently number around 5,630 animals and occur in ten African countries. The population, however, has still undergone a historical observed decline of more than 85%, which gives serious cause for concern.

The same criteria hold true for the Sumatran rhino, but there are two important differences. First, the estimated world population of Sumatran rhinos is now no more than 80 total, and that number is broken down into several geographically-isolated sub-populations, none of which contains more than 50 mature individuals. The Javan rhino’s situation is different as well. Its total population is well below the 250 threshold, but appears to have remained stable with slight increases in recent decades. Unfortunately, only a single population of between 72 animals now exists, which likely includes less than 50 mature individuals, and there are no Javan rhinos in captivity anywhere in the world.

With the world’s attention heavily focused on the African rhino poaching crisis – as it should be – we also must not lose sight of ongoing threats to species like the Sumatran and Javan rhinos, whose situations we refer to as being “under the radar.” Their numbers are orders of magnitude fewer than even the most endangered of the African rhinos, yet we’re reasonably certain that many people – maybe most – are not even aware that these Asian rhino species exist.

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This post is based off of an original post from May 2018 and has been updated to reflect the most recent IUCN Red List Update for African rhinos.