
From Watts Up With That?
Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
I keep reading about how weโre already well into the โSixth Wave Of Extinctionsโยญ. Now, Iโve studied this question extensively. I started back in 2010 with a post called โWhere Are The Corpsesโ, in which I looked at the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species and found that contrary to the โSixth Waveโ hype, 95% of mammal and bird extinctions occurred on islands and in Australia, where they were due to humans introducing new โalienโ species after millennia of isolation.
Craig Loehle got in touch with me and proposed that we turn it into a paper for the journals. He did the writing and I did the numbers, because I feel like I have to give myself a lobotomy to write in the dense boring style favored by the journals. He did an excellent job and shepherded it through the publication process, for which he has my eternal gratitude. Itโs published in Diversity and Distributions as โHistorical bird and terrestrial mammal extinction rates and causesโ, and itโs gotten over 150 citations in the journals.
But of course, the alarmism continued. Folks said things like โBut Willis, you only looked at mammals and birds. The Living Planet Index says thereโs been a 70% reduction in the numbers of vertebrate species since 1970โ.
Now, Iโve spent a good chunk of my life working outdoors, and I live in the forest and watch the local wildlife. That claim set my bad number detector ringing like the school lunch bell. I researched it and a few weeks ago I wrote another analysis called โE Pur Si Muoveโ, in which I showed that the LPI claims were strongly contradicted by the Red List data.
But the claims continued. This time itโs โBut Willis, the LPI only shows fish, mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians. What about all the rest of life.โ
As Michael Corleone said, โJust when I thought I was out, they pull me back in!โ. So, once more into the breach, dear friends โฆ
Let me start with some numbers from the IUCN Red List. Itโs the official list of threatened, non-threatened, and extinct members of four great kingdoms of lifeโanimals, plants, fungi, and chromista. And what are chromista when theyโre at home? I asked that myself. Turns out theyโre a group of mostly single-celled and also some larger life forms that include diatoms, mildews, and sea kelp.
The Red List has data on some 157,190 species of all kinds in all habitats around the planet. I do love it that the first two on the list are the โBlack Emo Skinkโ and the โViper Morayโ โฆ great band names for 2024. Gotta love our most mysterious planet. Here are Red List results.

Of these 157,190 species, 909 species are listed as extinct, with the earliest extinctions happening in the 1400s. The graph below shows the count of extinct and extant species.

Mmmm โฆ gotta say, Iโm not seeing the โSixth Wave Of Extinctionsโ.
Moving on, I find claims like these:
โDrastically increased rates of species extinctions โฆ are well documented.โ
and
โNature is declining globally at rates unprecedented in human history โ and the rate of species extinctions is accelerating.โ
So I thought Iโd look at extinction rates over time to see if โthe rate of species extinctions is acceleratingโ.
Now, as my studies have indicated, a disproportionate number of extinctions occurred on islands and Australia when melanin-deficient folks first stumbled upon them and introduced new, alien species. (Iโm told by the usually reliable sources that itโs not politically correct to say โmelanin-deficientโ. According to the best authorities, the proper term to use is โmelanin-challengedโ, so all the white folks donโt get triggered by being called โdeficientโ โฆ but I digress.)
However, these island species are only a small percentage of the total number of speciesโas youโd expect, there are far, far more species on the giant continents and in the ocean than on the small islands. And there are no more undiscovered islands to face the full onslaught of introduced species. However, the islands contain a large percentage of all extinctions.
So setting those extinctions aside for the moment, here is the history of all of the continental and marine Red List extinctions for which the Red List has a date for the extinction. The early data is sparse and as a result, contains few extinctions per year, so Iโve shown the period 1850-on when far more extinctions were occurring per year, and for which we have much better data.

And to close the circle, hereโs the same analysis including all of the known extinctions which have a date for the extinction.

As you can see, thereโs been no significant trend in the rate of extinctions over the last 150 years, either just including the continental and marine species, or including all species.
Now, is the post-1850 rate of extinctions greater than the geological rate? Absolutely. Itโs an order of magnitude or so greater.
But is it a โSixth Wave Of Extinctionsโ?
Letโs consider it this way. The 1850-2000 average is 3.6 extinctions of continental and marine species per year, with a peak value of about 8 extinctions per year. The Red List contains 157,190 continental and marine species, of which 909 are extinct.
So if the rate of extinctions continues at the current level, by the year 2100 weโd see an additional 3.6 extinctions/year * 76 years = 274 extinctions.
But heck, letโs get radicalโletโs use ten times that current extinction rate, or 36 extinctions per year. Itโs extremely unlikely, itโs never happened in the Red List record, but for this analysis, letโs use that extinction rate to be very conservative on the safe side.
That would give us 3,645 total extinctions by the year 2100. Hereโs how that would look, shown to the same scale as Figure 2.

Sorry, friends, but I gotta say that even if extinctions increased to an unbelievable ten times the current extinction rate, Iโm still not seeing the fabled โSixth Wave Of Extinctionsโ
Now, does this mean we shouldnโt care about extinctions?
Absolutely not. We need to be aware of all of the results of our human actions, and wherever possible and practical, make allowances for the creatures that we share the planet with. I worked a good chunk of my life as a commercial fisherman. Iโd love for my two-year-old grandson to be able to do the same โฆ and the only way to do that is to be sensitive to our effects on the ocean.
However, we also need to maintain a sense of proportion. Extinctions are a part of how nature works. Fun fact: ~99.9% of all species that ever existed have gone extinct.
And if some given species, after millions of years of evolution, only exists in a tiny area of the planet, its odds of extinction are very high no matter what we do. It obviously cannot adapt to even the smallest change in its surroundingsโif it could, it would be found in a far larger range. Hereโs a Red List description of one such extinct species:
โStypodon signifer [Stumptooth Minnow]: This species is only known from 6 specimens collected in 1880 and 1903, so its biology is mostly unknown. It occurred in springs on the floor of the Parras Valley [in Guanajuato, Mexico].โ
Sorry to be so blunt, but that joker is one of natureโs losers circling the drain. And fighting to prevent its extinction would have been a waste of time.
TL;DR Version? The โSixth Waveโ ainโt waving, so if someone starts telling you about the โSixth Wave Of Extinctionsโ, feel free to laugh and refer them to this analysis.
w.
My Usual: When you comment, please quote the exact words youโre discussing. It avoids endless misunderstandings.
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