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In the IUCN list, the term threatened is classified into three major groups: critically endangered, endangered, vulnerable species.
In the IUCN list, the term threatened is classified into three major groups: critically endangered, endangered, vulnerable species.
There are two ways by which a species may come to be listed (or delisted) under the ESA: We receive a petition from a person or organization requesting that we list a species as threatened or endangered, reclassify a species, or delist a species (View current petitions for species).
Critically Endangered (CR): A species facing an extremely high risk of extinction in the wild. Endangered (EN): A species considered to be facing a very high risk of extinction in the wild. Vulnerable (VU): A species considered to be facing a high risk of extinction in the wild.
In total, 54 species have been delisted from the ESA due to recovery, and another 56 species have been downlisted from endangered to threatened. The Services current workplan includes planned actions that encompass 60 species for potential downlisting or delisting due to successful recovery efforts.
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Delisted Species Delisting DateScientific NameESA Listing Date2021/02/12Sternula antillarum1985/05/282020/02/03Buteo solitarius1967/03/112019/11/08Setophaga kirtlandii1967/03/112018/05/16Vireo atricapilla1987/10/069 more rows
Endangered (EN), a designation applied to species that possess a very high risk of extinction as a result of rapid population declines of 50 to more than 70 percent over the previous 10 years (or three generations), a current population size of fewer than 250 individuals, or other factors.
Endangered (EN), a designation applied to species that possess a very high risk of extinction as a result of rapid population declines of 50 to more than 70 percent over the previous 10 years (or three generations), a current population size of fewer than 250 individuals, or other factors.
Delisting a species is the process of removing federal protection from an endangered or threatened animal or plant species. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service delists a species if it is recovered or extinct or if it was listed in error.
To delist species, we are required to determine that threats have been eliminated or controlled, based on several factors including population sizes and trends and the stability of habitat quality and quantity. When we reclassify species from endangered to threatened, a less dire status, we downlist them.

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