Current:Home > InvestIn 2019, there were hundreds of endangered earless dragons in Australia. This year, scientists counted just 11. -AssetTrainer
In 2019, there were hundreds of endangered earless dragons in Australia. This year, scientists counted just 11.
View
Date:2025-04-14 10:42:49
Australia's grassland earless dragon is no bigger than a pinkie when it emerges from its shell, but the little lizard faces an enormous challenge in the years ahead: avoiding extinction.
As recently as 2019, scientists in Canberra counted hundreds of grassland earless dragons in the wild. This year, they found 11.
In other areas of the country, the lizard has not been seen for three decades.
The earless dragon — which is light brown and has long white stripes down its body — measures about 15 centimeters, which is roughly the size of a $1 bill, when fully grown. It lacks an external ear opening and functional eardrum, hence the name.
Australia has four species of earless dragons. Three are critically endangered, the highest level of risk, while the fourth is endangered.
Last year, the Australia government said it was using "specially trained detection dogs to sniff out dragons and a breeding program to ensure the species is not lost again."
The critically endangered dragons will likely be extinct in the next 20 years without conservation efforts, experts say.
"If we properly manage their conservation, we can bring them back," said University of Canberra Professor Bernd Gruber, who is working to do just that.
"Sense of hope"
Australia is home to thousands of unique animals, including 1,130 species of reptile that are found nowhere else in the world.
Climate change, invasive plants and animals, and habitat destruction — such as the 2019 bushfires, which burned more than 46 million acres — have pushed Australia's native species to the brink.
In the past 300 years, about 100 of Australia's unique flora and fauna species have been wiped off the planet.
To save the earless dragons, there are several breeding programs underway across Australia, including a bio-secure facility in Canberra's bushlands, which Gruber is overseeing.
On shelves are dozens of tanks that house the lizards — one to each container — with a burrow, grass and heat lamps to keep them warm.
The biggest problem is matchmaking, with the territorial female lizards preferring to choose their mates.
This means that scientists must introduce different male lizards to the female until she approves.
If that was not hard enough, scientists must also use genetic analysis to determine which lizards are compatible together and ensure genetic diversity in their offspring.
At any one time, the breeding programs around Australia can have up to 90 earless dragons, which will eventually be released back into the wild.
At the moment, Gruber is looking after more than 20 small lizards that have just hatched. Scientists almost missed the tiny eggs until three weeks ago.
"There is a sense of hope looking over them," he told AFP.
"An important role"
Despite the efforts of scientists, the lizards are contending with a shrinking habitat and a changing climate.
Australian Conservation Foundation campaigner Peta Bulling said the lizards only live in temperate grasslands, most of which have been destroyed by urban development.
Only 0.5% of grasslands present at the time of European colonization still exist.
Without the lizards, Australia's alpine grasslands could look vastly different.
"We don't understand everything the grassland earless dragons do in the ecosystem, but we can make guesses they play an important role in managing invertebrate populations. They live in burrows in the soil, so they are probably aerating the soil in different ways too," she told AFP.
Bulling said that while it was important to bring the lizard back, it was also vital to protect their habitats, without which the newly saved lizards would have nowhere to live.
"They are highly specialized to live in their habitat but they will not adapt quickly to change," she said.
Last year, scientists rediscovered a small number of another kind of earless dragons after 50 years in an area that is being kept secret for conservation reasons.
Resources are being poured into understanding just how big that population is and what can be done to protect it.
Species at risk worldwide
The earless lizard is just one of thousands of species that are endangered — or have already gone extinct. Deforestation, pollution and the effects of climate change are just a few of the reasons putting various animals and plants at risk.
In October, 21 species in the U.S. were taken off the endangered species list because they are extinct, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service.
According to a 2023 report by the World Wildlife Fund, 380 new species were discovered across Asia in just the last few years, and many are already at risk of going extinct.
Four years before that, scientists warned that worldwide, 1 million species of plants and animals were at risk of extinction.
Still, in the U.S., the Endangered Species Act, which was established in 1973, has largely been a success. An astonishing 99% of the threatened species first listed have survived — including bald eagles, grizzly bears and alligators.
- In:
- Climate Change
- Endangered Species
- Australia
veryGood! (876)
Related
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Georgia election board rolls back some actions after a lawsuit claimed its meeting was illegal
- It Ends With Us Author Colleen Hoover Teases What's Changed from Book to Movie
- South Sudan men's basketball beats odds to inspire at Olympics
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Florida school board suspends employee who allowed her transgender daughter to play girls volleyball
- Georgia’s largest school district won’t teach Black studies course without state approval
- 2024 Olympics: Simone Biles Reveals USA Gymnastics’ Real Team Name After NSFW Answer
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Jack Flaherty trade gives Dodgers another starter amid rotation turmoil
Ranking
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Olympics bet against climate change with swimming in Seine and may lose. Scientists say told you so
- Mississippi man who defrauded pandemic relief fund out of $800K gets 18-month prison term
- 2024 Olympics: Judo Star Dislocates Shoulder While Celebrating Bronze Medal
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Kevin Costner’s ‘Horizon: An American Saga-Chapter 2’ gets Venice Film Festival premiere
- American Bobby Finke surges to silver in men's 800 free
- Mississippi man arrested on charges of threatening Jackson County judge
Recommendation
Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
Team USA men's soccer is going to the Olympic quarterfinals for the first time in 24 years
Delaney Schnell, Jess Parratto fail to add medals while Chinese diving stars shine
San Francisco police and street cleaners take aggressive approach to clearing homeless encampments
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
Navajo Nation plans to test limit of tribal law preventing transportation of uranium on its land
Jack Flaherty trade gives Dodgers another starter amid rotation turmoil
Florida county approves deal to build a new Tampa Bay Rays stadium