Emperor penguin and Antarctic fur seal now endangered

(iucn.org)

138 points | by darth_avocado 4 hours ago ago

30 comments

  • alsetmusic 3 hours ago ago

    It’s surprising how much this headline affects me. Who doesn’t like penguins? And seals are nice, but penguins are so likeable. We’ve really ruined everything.

    • Qem 3 hours ago ago

      I get a bit of this looming feeling every time there is discussion about the Awk programming language, because it reminds me we already got the closest thing to a penguin in the nothern hemisphere extinct by the XIX century: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_auk

      Hope this time around we do a better job of avoiding complete doom for these species.

      • moffkalast 3 hours ago ago

        If a bird can't fly and isn't a super fast runner, they end up as food. Tale as old as time.

        • khrbrt 2 hours ago ago

          They're going extinct by habitat loss from climate change.

        • bluefirebrand 2 hours ago ago

          Have you seen a penguin swim though? They are super fast in water

    • metabagel 3 hours ago ago

      Also this...

      "Trump Administration Seals Extinction Fate for Rice’s Whale in Offshore Drilling Decision"

      https://www.sierraclub.org/press-releases/2026/03/trump-admi...

    • nbbaier 3 hours ago ago

      This is the exact same reaction I had

    • srean 3 hours ago ago

      Seals can be a bundle of cuteness. Leopard seals are impressive, in a different way.

      This indeed a sad story.

    • timdiggerm 3 hours ago ago

      It's not as though people intentionally made these endangered because they have insufficient love for penguins. We have unintentionally done it because we have insufficient love (care) for them and many, many other things, creatures, people, etc.

      • pstuart 15 minutes ago ago

        It's because the people who get rich off of fossil fuels are in control, and they are willing to continue this damage as long as it adds to their personal fortunes.

        We could "manhattan project" ourselves out of this mess if we wanted to. China, in a sense, is doing just that.

    • bluefirebrand 2 hours ago ago

      I love penguins, and this news has me close to tears

      My local zoo has a little event during winter where the king penguins get to go for a little walk around outside their enclosure. I've been a few times this year and they are just such fun animals. It has made me want to get involved with the zoo somehow, maybe not working with the animals directly but something. I don't know.

      It makes me so sad how we humans know that we are messing things up on the planet but we keep doing it anyways because the economy must grow

  • oopsiremembered 3 hours ago ago

    Ice breaking up before the chicks can swim isn't even a threat to the penguin population I had considered, and now I am horrified and saddened.

  • metalman 17 minutes ago ago

    All large land and sea animals are now in danger, except perhaps those that are in some sense semi domesticated, deer, coyotes, raccoons, etc, but the wild ones are dying out due to human competition for resources or there very bodys.

  • lifeisstillgood 3 hours ago ago

    It’s terrible that the side effect of humans creating a world of wealth, safety and comfort (for all?) is that we risk destroying the very comfort we create - but it is also awesome that we have sufficient wealth to allow people to study these birds full time, enough wealth to build communication systems that tell random strangers about the threat they are under and hopefully enough time to correct the problem.

    I saw a speech by Carl Sagan that might be relevant - he said (sometime in 1990 judging by haircuts) that the US had spent 10 trillion dollars on defending itself from the threat of Soviet attack since 1945, but that the attack was not “certain” - not 100% sure. So if we were willing to spend trillions to prevent an uncertain catastrophe, why does the same logic not apply to climate chnage?

    • oopsiremembered 3 hours ago ago

      Right now, for many people, this falls into what Douglas Adams referred to as an SEP field. (SEP = Somebody Else's Problem)

    • AndrewKemendo 2 hours ago ago

      If you want to be thoroughly depressed go ahead and reread Karl Sagan‘s 1996 book the Demon haunted world

      Literally everything he described in there is precisely the world we live in today

  • picafrost 3 hours ago ago

    Life on this planet will be OK. Throughout geologic time countless species have gone extinct. The Anthropocene might be tragic for the natural world but not terminal.

    But: what are we trading it for? Higher living standards for more people is a noble and good but I don't think there's evidence it requires this rate of ecological destruction. Have we ever seriously tried to decouple growth from extraction?

    I'm not convinced a solar punk future exists where technology will eventually close that gap in time. Maybe it will. So far it seems that every efficiency gain gets swallowed by expanded consumption. What seems most probable now is that we don't get a better world but the same dirty one plus a Starbucks on Mars.

    • metabagel 3 hours ago ago

      > The Anthropocene might be tragic for the natural world but not terminal.

      I'm not so sure. I'm reminded of this quote:

      “How did you go bankrupt?" “Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.” ― Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises

    • metabagel 3 hours ago ago

      Plus, we are in the process of making parts of the earth unlivable for humans.

      • BurningFrog 2 hours ago ago

        Most of the planet already is unlivable for humans.

        • jerlam an hour ago ago

          The difference is that the parts we're making unlivable for humans already have millions of people living there already.

  • popol12 3 hours ago ago

    Quick, book a cruise to take some picture of them before they're all dead! \s

    • wiseowise 3 hours ago ago

      Don't forget to raise awareness on Instagram (and vote for parties that lead to this).

  • wiseowise 3 hours ago ago

    Climate change is a hoax, those leftist penguins and marxist seals just want to hamper our great economy!

    • vixen99 2 hours ago ago

      Those penguins and seals are certainly being ignored by the world at large. Thanks to trillions of dollars the renewable revolution has proceeded apace since 2010-2015 but reduction in fossil fuel use has not occurred. Quite the reverse and overall total energy demand is now greater than ever before. And from all this one concludes . . . ?

  • DarkmSparks 3 hours ago ago

    "According to the IUCN Red List criteria, a species is generally classified as Endangered (EN) if its population of mature individuals falls below 2,500"

    Also IUCN, with only 180,000 individuals the Emperor penguin is now classified as Endangered.

    I think someone has been out hunting headlines.

    • darth_avocado 3 hours ago ago

      That is objectively a wrong summary of how IUCN Red List is calculated. There’s a variety of factors including rate of decline, and any of those factors can lead to a species being in the Endangered category.

      https://www.iucnredlist.org/resources/categories-and-criteri...

      No one is farming for headlines.

      • DarkmSparks 2 hours ago ago

        the article says 20,000 was 10% of the population therefore the population is 180,000.

        if "something might happen in the next 60 years to wipe out half the population" counts as making a species endangered, every species on the planet counts as endangered.

        • darth_avocado a minute ago ago

          Please go ahead and read the criteria for how the species are tagged as endangered. Current status and population numbers can contribute to that tag, but if there are active threats that are going to rapidly affect healthy population numbers, they will still be considered endangered.

          The die off is accelerating. Krill shortages (mostly due to commercial fishing) and warming temperatures will ensure it’s not going to take 60 years and that’s what the tag means.