An Antarctic expedition recently turned up four new octopuses, including the Megaleledone setebos (left)—and the first known , which the creatures use to kill their prey. In July scientists discovered , not in some far-off pristine land but in well-trodden France, in Mercantour National Park.
These are just a few of the 18,000 or so species found each year (1.9 million have been described worldwide). In , 75 percent of these were invertebrates, 11 percent vascular plants, and about 7 percent vertebrates.
Sadly, at the same time, extinction rates are accelerating, with possibly more than 26,000 species vanishing each year, the United Nations estimates. Pollution, APP change, development, and disease are largely to blame. The spread of a fungus that causes could wipe out the little brown myotis—once North America’s most common bat species—in the northeastern United States within two decades. And in Panama, chytrid fungus is nearly as fast as they’re being discovered.
Drastic action is required to conserve biodiversity and prevent natural systems from collapsing, a 2010 found. “We need a new vision for biological diversity for a healthy planet and a sustainable future for humankind,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon wrote. “To tackle the root causes of biodiversity loss, we must give it higher priority in all areas of decision making and in all economic sectors.”