Extinction Over Time (2024)

Extinction of Plants and Animals

Extinction is the death of all members of a species of plants, animals, or other organisms. One of the most dramatic examples of a modern extinction is the passenger pigeon. Until the early 1800s, billions of passenger pigeons darkened the skies of the United States in spectacular migratory flocks. Easy to trap or shoot, passenger pigeons became a popular, cheap food. Commercial hunters killed them in vast numbers, eventually decimating the population. The last passenger pigeon, named Martha, died in the Cincinnati Zoological Garden in 1914, and was donated to the Smithsonian Institution.

Extinct Species List

The passenger pigeon is one of many hundreds of extinctions that have been caused by human activities in the past few centuries, such as:

Extinction Rates

Recent studies estimate about eight million species on Earth, of which at least 15,000 are threatened with extinction. It’s hard to pinpoint the exact extinction rate because many endangered species have not been identified or studied yet. A number of scientists grapple with improving methods for estimating extinction rates.

Regardless, scientists agree that today’s extinction rate is hundreds, or even thousands, of times higher than the natural baseline rate. Judging from the fossil record, the baseline extinction rate is about one species per every one million species per year. Scientists are racing to catalogue the biodiversity on Earth, working against the clock as extinctions continue to occur.

Five Mass Extinctions

At five other times in the past, rates of extinction have soared. These are called mass extinctions, when huge numbers of species disappear in a relatively short period of time. Paleontologists know about these extinctions from remains of organisms with durable skeletons that fossilized.

1. End of the Cretaceous (66 million years ago): Extinction of many species in both marine and terrestrial habitats including pterosaurs, mosasaurs and other marine reptiles, many insects, and all non-Avian dinosaurs. The scientific consensus is that this mass extinction was caused by environmental consequences from the impact of a large asteroid hitting Earth in the vicinity of what is now Mexico.

2. Late Triassic (199 million years ago): Extinction of many marine sponges, gastropods, bivalves, cephalopods, brachiopods, as well as some terrestrial insects and vertebrates. The extinction coincides with massive volcanic eruptions along the margins of what is now the Atlantic Ocean.

3. End Permian (252 million years ago): Earth’s largest extinction event, decimating most marine species such as all trilobites, plus insects and other terrestrial animals. Most scientific evidence suggests the causes were global warming and atmospheric changes associated with huge volcanic eruptions in what is now Siberia.

4. Late Devonian (378 million years ago): Extinction of many marine species, including corals, brachiopods, and single-celled foraminiferans, from causes that are not well understood yet.

5. Late Ordovician (447 million years ago): Extinction of marine organisms such as some bryozoans, reef-building brachiopods, trilobites, graptolites, and conodonts as a result of global cooling, glaciation, and lower sea levels.

Smithsonian Paleobiologists continue to study the role that past extinctions had on plants, animals, and other species. Dr. Gene Hunt studies how the relatedness and diversity of organisms relates to what happens to them in an extinction event. Dr. Richard Bambachconducts research on variation in marine biodiversity in relation to different extinction events. By studying the evolution and extinction of tiny organisms called foraminifera,Dr. Brian Huberassesses how Earth's conditions have changed over time.

Are We Part of a Sixth Mass Extinction?

At the end of the last ice age, 10,000 years ago, many North American animals went extinct, including mammoths, mastodons, and glyptodonts. While climate changes were a factor, paleontologists have evidence that overhunting by humans was also to blame. Early humans worked cooperatively to trap and slaughter large animals in pits. About the same time, humans began farming, settling down and making drastic changes in the habitats of other species.

Starting in the 1800s, industrialization drove up extinction rates and has continued to do so. For example, Chinese river dolphins, foothill yellow-legged frogs, and sockeye salmonare among the many species currently endangered by water pollution, dams, and other industrial pressures on rivers. Smithsonian Anthropologist Dr. Torben Rick leads an effort to understand how human activities affect biodiversity by studying interactions between humans and other species in the Channel Islands from ancient to modern times.

Preventing Extinction

The science of conservation biologyfocuses on managing ecosystems to prevent species from going extinct. Because we can’t protect everything, conservation efforts target particular species or habitats. Smithsonian scientist Dr. Brian Gratwickeis the “amphibian avenger” for his work to save populations of frogs from extinction. The Smithsonian is part of an alliance of institutions (Global Tiger Initiative) working to save wild tigers from extinction.

The value of a species may be judged by various criteria, depending on who is making decisions about what to conserve. For example, cultural value is important in efforts to conserve populations of Pacific salmon. A Smithsonian exhibit in the Sant Ocean Hallshows how salmon for centuries have shaped a way of life for Native Americans living in the Pacific Northwest.

Reversing Extinction

Recent improvements in genetic engineering have raised questions about bringing extinct species back to life. Since Dolly the sheep was cloned in 1996, scientists know it is possible to create an organism from the DNA in a single cell. Stored in museum collections throughout the world are specimens of extinct animals containing DNA. The idea of using DNA to revive extinct species and repopulating them is controversial. How would we choose which ones? How would they impact species still on Earth?

Extinction Over Time (2024)

FAQs

What is happening to the extinction rate over time? ›

This began many thousands of years ago, and as a result the human-caused loss of global biodiversity was already significant before the modern era. Now, the extinction rate is accelerating, biodiversity is in rapid decline, and many ecosystem processes are being degraded or lost.

How many times has life on Earth been wiped out? ›

The planet has experienced five previous mass extinction events, the last one occurring 65.5 million years ago which wiped out the dinosaurs from existence. Experts now believe we're in the midst of a sixth mass extinction.

What were the five major extinctions? ›

Top Five Extinctions
  • Ordovician-silurian Extinction: 440 million years ago. Small marine organisms died out.
  • Devonian Extinction: 365 million years ago. ...
  • Permian-triassic Extinction: 250 million years ago. ...
  • Triassic-jurassic Extinction: 210 million years ago. ...
  • Cretaceous-tertiary Extinction: 65 million Years Ago.

When did 90% of all species go extinct? ›

The largest extinction took place around 250 million years ago. Known as the Permian-Triassic extinction, or the Great Dying, this event saw the end of more than 90 percent of Earth's species. Although life on Earth was nearly wiped out, the Great Dying made room for new organisms, including the first dinosaurs.

How likely is human extinction? ›

As of March 26, 2024, Metaculus users estimate a 1% probability of human extinction by 2100.

How long do humans have left on Earth? ›

But how long can humans last? Eventually humans will go extinct. According to the most wildly optimistic estimate, our species will last perhaps another billion years but end when the expanding envelope of the sun swells outward and heats the planet to a Venus-like state. But a billion years is a long time.

How many years do we have left to survive? ›

So how long does Earth have until the planet is swallowed by the sun? Expected time of death: several billion years from now. But life on Earth will end much, much sooner than that. Earth will become unlivable for most organisms in about 1.3 billion years due to the sun's natural evolution, experts told Live Science.

Are we in a mass extinction? ›

The planet's biodiversity is plunging, with a quarter of species facing extinction, many within decades. Numerous experts believe we are living through, or on the cusp of, a mass species extinction event, the sixth in the history of the planet and the first to be caused by a single organism—us.

Will there be a mass extinction in 2050? ›

The results are bleak: the supercomputer says 10 percent of all plant and animal species will disappear by 2050, and 27 percent of vertebrate diversity will vanish by 2100. Yeah, that's over a quarter of our animals gone in about 75 years.

What species survived all 5 mass extinctions? ›

It happened in a series of two events, and killed off more than 25% of all flora-and-fauna families, nearly 60% of all genera, and nearly 90% of all species on Earth! Tardigrades, commonly called water bears originated on the earth about 500 million years ago and survived all 5 mass extinctions.

What was the worst extinction event? ›

The largest extinction in Earth's history marked the end of the Permian period, some 252 million years ago. Long before dinosaurs, our planet was populated with plants and animals that were mostly obliterated after a series of massive volcanic eruptions in Siberia.

What is the most famous extinction event? ›

The Permian-Triassic extinction, sometimes called the “Great Dying,” is the greatest mass extinction event in the fossil record.

What species survived the Great Dying? ›

Alligators & Crocodiles: These sizeable reptiles survived—even though other large reptiles did not. Birds: Birds are the only dinosaurs to survive the mass extinction event 65 million years ago. Frogs & Salamanders: These seemingly delicate amphibians survived the extinction that wiped out larger animals.

What will be the last species on Earth? ›

One species might be okay, though. In 2017, scientists at the University of Oxford and Harvard University studied the resilience of life to astrophysical events, concluding that the only animal likely to survive the risk of extinction from all astrophysical catastrophes is the tardigrade.

What animal is about to be extinct? ›

Species Directory
Common nameScientific nameConservation status ↓
Eastern Lowland GorillaGorilla beringei graueriCritically Endangered
Hawksbill TurtleEretmochelys imbricataCritically Endangered
Javan RhinoRhinoceros sondaicusCritically Endangered
OrangutanPongo abelii, Pongo pygmaeusCritically Endangered
46 more rows

Is extinction happening at a faster rate? ›

Extinction Rates

Regardless, scientists agree that today's extinction rate is hundreds, or even thousands, of times higher than the natural baseline rate. Judging from the fossil record, the baseline extinction rate is about one species per every one million species per year.

What is the current cause of extinction? ›

Destruction of Habitat – It is currently the biggest cause of current extinctions. Deforestation has killed off more species than we can count. Whole ecosystems live in our forests. It is predicted that all our rainforest can disappear in the next 100 years if we cannot stop deforestation.

What is causing the extinction crisis? ›

More than a century of habitat destruction, pollution, the spread of invasive species, overharvest from the wild, climate change, population growth and other human activities have pushed nature to the brink.

What is leading to extinction? ›

Habitat Loss. Species endangerment and extinction have three major anthropogenic causes—overhunting or overharvesting; introduction of nonnative species, including the spread of disease; and habitat degradation or loss. All three causes probably were factors in prehistoric as well as modern times.

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