WWF: 91 new species discovered in Vietnam in 2020

11:01, 31/01/2022

As many as 91 new species were discovered in Vietnam in 2020, including 85 endemic species, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) in its report issued on January 26.

 

As many as 91 new species were discovered in Vietnam in 2020, including 85 endemic species, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) in its report issued on January 26.

Big-head frog is one of the 91 new species discovered in Vietnam in 2020.
Big-head frog is one of the 91 new species discovered in Vietnam in 2020.

The report collected hundreds of studies by scientists from universities, preservation organisations and research institutes globally.

It also unveiled that 155 plant, 16 fish, 17 amphibian, 35 reptile and one mammal species were identified in the Greater Mekong Sub-region (GMS), bringing the total new ones to 3,007 since 1997.

Four other countries in the GMS, namely Laos, Cambodia, Thailand and Myanmar, recorded 133 new species, many of them are facing the risk of extinction due to habitat loss, deforestation, illegal hunting and trade.

Another new report by the WWF also warned that primates in the region have declined seriously in recent decades due to human activities such as illegal logging, land use conversion and grazing. Hunting and trapping are also exerting huge pressure on primate population, putting them at risk of extinction.

(Source: VNA)