An international conservation group is warning that more than half of the European tree species that exist nowhere else in the world are threatened with extinction.
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A critically endangered Sorbus rhodanthera is seen in Czech Republic [Credit: Martin Lepsi/IUCN via AP] |
More than 150 experts contributed to the report, which the conservancy called the first comprehensive assessment of the extinction threat for all types of trees native to Europe.
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An endangered Sorbus sudetica, which is considered extinct in Poland, is seen in Czech Republic [Credit: Alena Jirova/IUCN via AP] |
The findings come amid heightened concern about environmental issues and extinction risks in Europe and beyond. A U.N. report on biodiversity released in May warned that extinction looms for over 1 million species of plants and animals.
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An endangered Sorbus bosniaca is seen in Bosnia and Herzegovina [Credit: Faruk Bogunic/IUCN via AP] |
The group's Europe director, Luc Bas, said "human-led activities" were resulting in population declines of important tree species.
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A critically endangered Cheddar Whitebeam tree is seen in England [Credit: Libby Houston/IUCN via AP] |
The conservancy highlighted Aesculus hippocastanum, or the horse chestnut tree, native to southeastern Europe. The polished brown conker inside its spiked fruit "is perhaps more famous than the tree itself" because of its use in children's playground games, the report said.
The species, present in Europe since before the last Ice Age, has been threatened by defoliation because of the leaf miner moth, and a blotch caused by a fungus, as well as by human pressures. It is endangered in Bulgaria and Greece and critically endangered in Albania.
Source: The Associated Press [September 27, 2019]
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