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Файл:ThylacineHobart1933.jpg
The last known thylacine (Tasmanian tiger), photographed at Hobart Zoo in 1933.

An endling is the last known individual of a species or subspecies. Once the endling dies, the species becomes extinct. The word was coined in correspondence in the scientific journal Nature.

Usage

The 4 April 1996 issue of Nature published a correspondence in which commentators suggested that a new word, endling, be adopted to denote the last individual of a species.[1][2] The 23 May issue of Nature published several counter-suggestions, including ender, terminarch, and relict.[1][3]

The word endling appeared on the walls of the National Museum of Australia in Tangled Destinies, a 2001 exhibition by Matt Kirchman and Scott Guerin, about the relationship between Australian peoples and their land. In the exhibition, the definition, as it appeared in Nature, was printed in large letters on the wall above two specimens of the extinct Tasmanian tiger: "Endling (n.) The last surviving individual of a species of animal or plant". A printed description of this exhibition offered a similar definition, omitting reference to plants: "An endling is the name given to an animal that is the last of its species."[4][5]

In The Flight of the Emu: A Hundred Years of Australian Ornithology 1901-2001, author Libby Robin stated that "the very last individual of a species" is "what scientists refer to as an 'endling'".[6]

In 2011, the word was used in the Earth Island Journal, in an essay by Eric Freedman entitled "Extinction Is Forever: A Quest for the Last Known Survivors". Freedman defined endling as "the last known specimen of her species."[7]

In "The Sense of an Endling", author Helen Lewis describes the notion of an endling as poignant, and the word as "wonderfully Tolkien-esque".[8]

Author Eric Freedman describes endling as "a word with finality", stating, "It is deep-to-the-bone chilling to know the exact date a species disappeared from Earth. It is even more ghastly to look upon the place where it happened and know that nobody knew or cared at the time what had transpired and why."[9]

Notable endlings

Файл:Martha last passenger pigeon 1914.jpg
Martha, the last passenger pigeon, died in the Cincinnati Zoo on September 1, 1914.

This is not a comprehensive list of contemporary extinction, but a list of high-profile, widely publicised examples of when the last individual of a species was known.

Birds

Файл:Dusky Seaside Sparrow.jpg
A dusky seaside sparrow (Ammodramus maritimus nigrescens), officially declared extinct in 1990.

Mammals

  • In 1627, the last aurochs (Bos primigenius), an ancestor of bovine and cattle, died in a forest near what is now Jaktorów in modern-day Poland.[14]
Файл:Quagga photo.jpg
A quagga mare at the London Zoo in 1870. This is the only specimen photographed alive.
  • The quagga (Equus quagga quagga) became extinct in the wild in the late 1870s due to hunting for meat and skins, and the subspecies' endling died in captivity on 12 August 1883 at the Artis in Amsterdam.[15]
  • On 7 September 1936, the last known captive thylacine (Thylacinus cynocephalus), also called Tasmanian tiger, died in Hobart Zoo, following persecution of the species through hunting and trapping. Information published about this individual has been conflicted throughout the decades following its death.[16] Areas of contention include whether it was male or female, whether it was named "Benjamin" or not, where it was captured, by whom it was captured, whether it was neglected in its zoo enclosure and even whether it was the last known surviving Thylacine.[16] A comprehensive analysis of the history of this individual published in 2023 concludes or re-affirms that it was male, captured on 7 July 1930, at Penney's Flats in northwestern Tasmania by Roy and Dan Delphin, never called Benjamin during its lifetime and that it was the most valued animal in the zoo's collection, not neglected and that it died of old age.[16] Although it is generally accepted the Thylacine probably persisted in the wild following the death of this individual,[17] the Tasmanian Tiger at Hobart Zoo is considered the endling not only for its species, but also the family Thylacinidae.
  • Celia, the last Pyrenean ibex (Capra pyrenaica pyrenaica), was found dead on 6 January 2000 in the Spanish Pyrenees, after hunting and competition from livestock reduced the population to one individual.[18]

Reptiles and amphibians

Файл:Lonesome George (2009).jpg
Lonesome George, the last Pinta Island tortoise
Файл:Ecnomiohyla rabborum 2.jpg
'Toughie', the last known Rabb's fringe-limbed treefrog.

Invertebrates

  • Turgi was the last Partula turgida, a Polynesian tree snail, who died on 31 January 1996 in the London Zoo.[22]
  • A tank in the Bristol Zoo was the last refuge of Partula faba, a land snail from Ra'iātea in French Polynesia. The population dropped from 38 in 2012[23] to one in 2015.[24] The last individual died on 21 February 2016.[24]
  • George was the last known individual of the Oahu tree snail species Achatinella apexfulva. He died on January 1, 2019, in captivity near Kailua, Hawaii.[25]

Plants

See also

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References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links