1. Northern white rhino (Sumatran rhino).
Congo's Garamba National Park has fewer than 25 northern white rhinos in the world, and northern white rhinos could disappear from the earth altogether.
Gualamba National Park is located on the border of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Since the original intention of building the park was to apply for the park to become a world natural heritage, the builders spared no effort to encircle. a large area of meadows and woods. Gualamba National Park is home to many rare animals in the world, such as jungle elephants, bison and chimpanzees. Of course, the most valuable animals are the northern white rhinos, of which there are less than 25.
There are large genetic differences between the northern white rhino and the southern African white rhino. They once bred in large numbersin Uganda, but gradually disappeared due to neglect of the local government. In Gualamba National Park, their numbers reached 35 in the late 1980s and 30 in April 2003. Since then, 6 have been killed and 4 have been born. Last month, two more elephants were hunted and nearly a thousand elephants were killed. at the same time.
Although the trade in ivory and rhino horn is banned globally, the black market is still booming. There is a dedicated rhino horn market in Yemen, where daggers with rhino horn handles attract many buyers. Attention from sellers is a status symbol.
2. Sumatran Tiger
There are only 20 in the wild. With the extinction of the Bali tiger in the 1940s and the Caspian tiger in the 1970s, this species is also expected to disappear from the planet in the near future.
3. Monk seals
According to expert estimates, there are only 500 of them in the world, living in the Mediterranean Sea. Affected by the deterioration of the ecological environment of sea water and the Mediterranean Sea. beaches, they are hunted in large numbers by fishermen.
4. Orinoco Crocodile (scientific name: Crocodylusintermedius)
Only 250 to 700 survive in the wild. Mainly in Cuba and Venezuela.
5. Spix Parrot:
In the wild, although Spix Parrot is not completely extinct, it is extremely rare. Ornithologists searching for this bird in 1990 found only one surviving male living in northeastern Brazil. The approximately 31 birds currently captured constitute this bird's only hope of survival.
6. Giant pandas
Fewer than 700 wild giant pandas remain, mainly distributed in mountainous areas of Sichuan province in China. They are threatened by habitat loss and lare poachers.
7. Blue whale
The number of blue whales, the world's largest mammal, has been reduced from 250,000 to only about 500, living in the southern oceans. hemisphere.