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Nature pushed to the brink by 'runaway consumption': WWF

Measured by weight, or biomass, wild animals today only account for four per cent of mammals on Earth, with humans (36 per cent) and livestock (60 per cent) making up the rest.

October 30, 2018 / 10:07 IST
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Tourists walk in the middle of the dried-up area of Lake Nakuru in Kenya's Rift Valley, 160km (99 miles) west of the capital Nairobi, November 11, 2006. ccording to Kenya Wildlife Services, the flamingo population at the lake has decreased to 200,000 from 800,000 because of the lack of water due to the massive destruction of the lake's main catchment area - the Mau forest. REUTERS/Antony Njuguna (KENYA) - GM1DTXPMWSAA

Unbridled consumption has decimated global wildlife, triggered a mass extinction and exhausted Earth's capacity to accommodate humanity's expanding appetites, the conservation group WWF warned Tuesday.

From 1970 to 2014, 60 per cent of all animals with a backbone -- fish, birds, amphibians, reptiles and mammals -- were wiped out by human activity, according to WWF's "Living Planet" report, based on an ongoing survey of more than 4,000 species spread over 16,700 populations scattered across the globe.

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"The situation is really bad, and it keeps getting worse," WWF International director general Marco Lambertini told AFP.

"The only good news is that we know exactly what is happening."