List of Asian animals extinct in the Holocene explained

This is a list of Asian animals extinct in the Holocene that covers extinctions from the Holocene epoch, a geologic epoch that began about 11,650 years before present (about 9700 BCE) and continues to the present day.[1]

This list includes the Asian continent and its surrounding islands, including Cyprus. The three Transcaucasian republics of Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan are included in the List of European species extinct in the Holocene, even though their territory may fall partially or fully in Asia depending on the definition of Europe considered. Species from Western New Guinea (Indonesia), the Aru Islands (Indonesia), and Christmas Island (Australia) are listed in List of Australia-New Guinea species extinct in the Holocene.

Many extinction dates are unknown due to a lack of relevant information.

Mammals (class Mammalia)

Elephant-like mammals (order Proboscidea)

Elephants and mammoths (family Elephantidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Syrian elephantElephas maximus asurusMesopotamiaArchaeological evidence and historical records imply an extinction caused by hunting and deforestation in the 8th century BCE, with war elephants from the 3rd century BCE onward being imports from South Asia. However, the lack of evidence of Asian elephants in the Near East between 200,000 and 3,500 years ago has led some authors to propose that Bronze Age elephants were actually introduced by people to provide themselves with exotic game and ivory. If true, this would invalidate the subspecies E. m. asurus.[2]
Javan elephantElephas maximus sondaicusJava, IndonesiaIntroduced to Sulu in the Philippines in the 14th century, before its extinction in Java; survived in the former until its extermination in 1850. However, the extant Bornean elephant has been suggested to have originated from Sulu stock and not be native to the island. If true, this would make the subspecies E. m. sondaicus synonymous with E. m. borneensis and not globally extinct.[3]
Woolly mammothMammuthus primigeniusNorthern Eurasia and North AmericaMost recent remains in Wrangel Island, Russia dated to 1795-1675 BCE.[4]
Cyprus dwarf elephantPalaeoloxodon cypriotesCyprusMost recent remains dated to 10699-7299 BCE.
Asian straight-tusked elephantPalaeoloxodon namadicusSouth and East AsiaThe date 7330-6250 BCE was obtained from carbonaceous clay near Palaeoloxodon remains in the Baneta Formation of the Narmada Valley, India, suggesting survival into the Holocene, though no direct datation was taken from the bones.[5]

Sea cows (order Sirenia)

Dugongs (family Dugongidae)

Lagomorphs (order Lagomorpha)

Rabbits and hares (family Leporidae)

Rodents (order Rodentia)

Old World rats and mice (family Muridae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Alor Island giant ratAlormys apliniAlor Island, IndonesiaMost recent remains at Tabubung 4 dated to 62 BCE - 87 CE. The extinction coincides with a period of aridification, deforestation, and extinction of other giant rat species in the island.[9]
Carpomys dakalLuzon, PhilippinesMost recent remains dated to 2050-50 BCE. Probably disappeared due to increased aridity and deforestation.[10]
Buhler's coryphomysCoryphomys buehleriTimorMost recent remains dated to around 50 BCE.
Timor giant ratCoryphomys musseriTimorMost recent remains dated to around 50 BCE.
Crateromys ballikLuzon, PhilippinesMost recent remains dated to 2050-50 BCE. Probably disappeared due to increased aridity and deforestation.[11]
Miyako long-tailed ratDiplothrix miyakoensisMiyako Island, Ryukyu, JapanMost recent remains dated to around 9050-8050 BCE.
Hooijer's giant ratHooijeromys nusantenggaraLesser Sunda Islands, IndonesiaMost recent remains dated to around 1050 BCE.
Milimonggamys juliaeSumba Island, IndonesiaMost recent remains dated to 54-222 CE.
Niviventer sp.Ishigaki Island, JapanMost recent remains dated to 2050-50 BCE.
Verhoeven's giant tree ratPapagomys theodorverhoeveniFlores, IndonesiaMost recent remains to around 1050 BCE.
Raksasamys tikusbesarSumba Island, IndonesiaMost recent remains dated to 1935-1700 BCE.
Flores cave ratSpelaeomys florensisFlores, IndonesiaMost recent remains dated to the Holocene.[12]
Possibly extinct

Primates (order Primates)

Gibbons (family Hylobatidae)

Bats (order Chiroptera)

Megabats (family Pteropodidae)

Locally extinct

Vesper bats (family Vespertilionidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeComments
Gloomy tube-nosed batMurina tenebrosaTsushima and possibly Yakushima, JapanLast collected in 1962. Suggested as a possible synonym for the Ussuri tube-nosed bat (M. ussuriensis).[20]
Sturdee's pipistrellePipistrellus sturdeeiHaha-jima, Bonin Islands, Japan Only known from the type specimen collected in 1889.[21]

Carnivorans (order Carnivora)

Cats (family Felidae)

Locally extinct
Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Formosan clouded leopardPopulation of the clouded leopard (Neofelis nebulosa)TaiwanLast confirmed record in 1983.[22] Though named as a subspecies on the basis of a stuffed specimen in 1862 (N. n. brachyura), later morphological and genetic studies invalidate this distinction.[23]
Bali tigerPopulation of the Sunda Island tiger (Panthera tigris sondaica)Bali, IndonesiaLast confirmed individual killed in 1937.[24] Named as a separate subspecies in 1912 (P. t. balica), but later included in P. t. sondaica on genetic grounds.
Bornean tigerPopulation of the Sunda Island tiger (Panthera tigris sondaica)Borneo and Palawan, Philippines[25] A navicular from Borneo was dated to 8550-1050 BCE. Survival into even more recent times has been proposed on the basis of teeth and skins owned by indigenous peoples, local names, folklore, and alleged sightings including two photographs taken in 1975. However, most authors discount these remains as imports from outside Borneo, and the photographs as hoaxes.[26]
Javan tigerPopulation of the Sunda Island tiger (Panthera tigris sondaica)Java, IndonesiaThe last confirmed individual was killed at the Mount Halimun Salak National Park in 1984, though a tiger was sighted near Sukabumi Selatan in 2019 and one recovered hair was identified as closer genetically to a Javan museum specimen than to tigers from Sumatra, southeast Asia, and Russia.[27] Named a distinct subspecies in 1844, but genetic research indicates that it is not different enough from the extant Sumatran tiger, and as a result the taxon P. t. sondaica is not extinct.
Caspian tigerPopulation of the mainland Asian tiger (Panthera tigris tigris)Western and Central AsiaThe last known wild individual was killed in Turkey in 1970, and the last in captivity in Iran during the 1979 Revolution. Though named as the subspecies P. t. virgata in 1815, genetic evidence indicates that it is not different enough from other tigers of the Asian mainland to warrant separate status. It was closest to the extant Siberian tiger.
South China tigerPopulation of the mainland Asian tiger (Panthera tigris tigris)Southern ChinaLast recorded in the wild around 2000; survives in captivity.[28] Though named as the subspecies P. t. amoyensis in 1905, genetic evidence indicates that it is not different enough from other mainland tigers to warrant separate status.

Viverrids (family (Viverridae)

Possibly extinct

Dogs (family Canidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Hokkaidō wolfCanis lupus hattaiHokkaidō, Sakhalin, Kamchatka, Iturup and Kunashir[30] Exterminated by 1889 as part of a plan to use Hokkaidō for horse and cattle ranching.[31]
Japanese wolfCanis lupus hodophilaxHonshū, Shikoku, and Kyūshū, JapanLast confirmed individual killed in 1905, shortly after a rabies epidemic ravaged the population.
Possibly extinct

Martens, polecats, otters, badgers, and weasels (family Mustelidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Hokkaidō otterLutra lutra whiteleyiHokkaidō and southern Kuril Islands[34] Last known individual killed at Shiretoko Peninsula in 1950.[35]
Japanese otterLutra nipponHonshū, Shikoku, and Kyūshū, JapanLast confirmed sighting in Shikoku in 1983.

Odd-toed ungulates (order Perissodactyla)

Horses and allies (family Equidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
TarpanEquus ferus ferusIberian Peninsula to Western Siberia;[36] Anatolia?[37] Historically recorded in Western Siberia until the 18th century. Analysis of bones found at archaeological sites from the Chalcolithic period (c. 3000-2000 BCE) show wild horses in this area belonged to the subspecies E. f. ferus and not to Przewalski's horse (E. f. przewalskii).
Syrian wild assEquus hemionus hemippusFertile CrescentLast known individual died in captivity at Vienna Zoo in 1927. It probably disappeared from the wild around the same time.[38]
European wild assEquus hemionus hydruntinusSouthern Europe to northern IranMost recent remains at Sagzabad, Iran dated to 1294-1035 BCE.[39]
Lena horseEquus lenensisNorthern SiberiaMost recent remains at Bolshoy Lyakhovsky Island dated to 320-220 BCE. Horse remains of undetermined affiliation were also found in a Inuit site at Cape Baranov dating to the 8th-9th century CE. The cold-adapted Yakutian horse was speculated to be a descendant of the Lena horse, but genetic evidence shows it descends from domestic horses introduced from Central Asia in the Middle Ages.[40] Nevertheless, the Yakutian horse is used as proxy for the Lena horse in Pleistocene Park.[41]
Ovodov horseEquus ovodoviSouthern Siberia to northern ChinaMost recent remains in China dated to 1666-1506 BCE.[42]
Locally extinct

Rhinoceroses (family Rhinocerotidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Woolly rhinocerosCoelodonta antiquitatisNorthern EurasiaEnvironmental DNA last detected in permafrost dating to 8050-7650 BCE near the Kolyma river, Russia.[45]
Vietnamese rhinocerosRhinoceros sondaicus annamiticusVietnam, Laos, Cambodia, and eastern ThailandLast individual killed at the Cat Tien National Park, Vietnam in 2010.[46]
Lesser Indian rhinocerosRhinoceros sondaicus inermisNortheastern India, Bangladesh, and MyanmarLast confirmed individual killed around 1888 in the Sundarbans. Survival into the 20th century is doubtful, certainly not past 1925.[47]
Possibly extinct

Even-toed ungulates (order Artiodactyla)

Camels and llamas (family Camelidae)

Extinct in the wild
Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Bactrian camelCamelus bactrianusCentral and eastern Asian steppe[49] Genetic evidence indicates that the domestic Bactrian camel and the extant, more desert-adapted wild Bactrian camel (C. ferus) from East Turkestan split over one million years ago. In consequence, the latter species cannot be the wild ancestor of the former, and the unknown ancestor of C. bactrianus must have become extinct at some point after the species was domesticated around 4000-3000 BCE.[50]
DromedaryCamelus dromedariusArabian PeninsulaMost recent remains of the wild form at Al Sufouh, United Arab Emirates, dated to 404 BCE.[51] The species survives as domestic and feral populations.

Pigs (family Suidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeComments
Cebu warty pigSus cebifrons cebifronsCebu, PhilippinesDescribed from skulls collected in Cebu island, where the species Sus cebifrons is now extinct, but lack of other remains makes the subspecies distinction with other Philippine islands populations dubious.[52] The whole species is threatened by habitat fragmentation caused by logging and agriculture, hunting pressure, and hybridization with domestic pigs.[53]
Sus sp.Miyako Island, JapanMost recent remains dated to 9050-8050 BCE.

Hippopotamuses (family Hippopotamidae)

Locally extinct

Chinese river dolphins (family Lipotidae)

Possibly extinct

True deer (family Cervidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Miyako roe deerCapreolus tokunagaiMiyako Island, Ryukyu, JapanMost recent remains dated to 9050-8050 BCE.[56]
Irish elkMegaloceros giganteusWestern Europe to southern SiberiaMost recent remains at Kamyshlov, Russia dated to 5845-5673 BCE.[57]
Schomburgk's deerRucervus schomburgkiCentral ThailandLast known animals in the wild were killed in 1932 near Sai Yoke and Kwae Yai, and the last in captivity was killed in 1938. Declined in the 19th century because of habitat loss as its wet grassland habitat was turned into rice fields for export. It was also hunted for meat during the monsoon season, and to use its antlers in traditional medicine.[58]
Extinct in the wild

Cattle, goats, antelopes, and others (family Bovidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Bubal hartebeestAlcelaphus buselaphus buselaphusNorth Africa and Southern LevantDisappeared from the Southern Levant during the Iron Age (1200-586 BCE).[61]
Caucasian wisentBison bonasus caucasicusCaucasus and AnatoliaPresent in eastern Turkey until the Iron Age.[62]
Steppe bisonBison priscusNorthern Eurasia and North AmericaMost recent, confirmed remains were dated to 6870-6950 BCE near the Popigai River in the Taymyr Peninsula of Russia, and environmental DNA of bison was recovered from permafrost in northeastern Siberia dating to 5050-3800 BCE. Partial B. priscus remains are hard to distinguish anatomically from B. bonasus, which muddles the timeframe of its extinction in Europe and Western Siberia; often the species B. priscus is assigned to Late Pleistocene remains and B. bonasus to Holocene remains without further discussion. However B. priscus is both genetically distinct and known to have survived into the middle Holocene of North America.[63] Remains of either B. priscus or B. bonasus were dated in the Angara River basin to 2550-2440 BCE,[64] and a small bison persisted in the Baikal region until the 7th-10th century CE (considered B. priscus by Boeskorov and B. bonasus by Sipko).
Indian aurochsBos primigenius namadicusIndian subcontinentMost recent remains dated to 2200 BCE in Karnataka, India. The Indian aurochs was independently domesticated and is the originator of the zebu cattle.[65]
Eurasian aurochsBos primigenius primigeniusMid-latitude Eurasia[66] Present near Lake Baikal on 3020-2960 BCE,[67] China by 1900-1745 BCE,[68] Southern Levant until the Iron Age (1200-585 BCE), and the Turkey-Syria border until the Late Middle Ages. The Eurasian aurochs was domesticated in Anatolia in the eighth millennium BCE, originating most domestic breeds of taurine cattle.
Cebu tamarawBubalus cebuensisCebu, PhilippinesDescribed from a partial skeleton from either the Late Pleistocene or the Holocene.[69]
Bubalus grovesiSouth Sulawesi, IndonesiaMost recent remains dated to the Middle or Late Holocene.[70]
Short-horned water buffaloBubalus mephistophelesSouth, central, and east ChinaMost recent remains at Gaoling, Xi'an dated to 1750-1650 BCE. The domestic water buffalo now present in China is not a descendant of B. mephistopheles but was introduced from Southeast Asia.[71]
Queen of Sheba's gazelleGazella bilkisTaiz, YemenOnly known from five animals hunted in 1951.[72]
Saudi gazelleGazella saudiyaArabian PeninsulaLast recorded in 1970. It was hunted to extinction.[73]
Extinct in the wild
Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Lowland wisentBison bonasus bonasusWestern Europe to southern SiberiaPresent during the Holocene in the southern Urals, Western Siberia, the Kuznetsk Depression, Altai and Baikal regions[75] (if the latter wasn't B. priscus). The subspecies became globally extinct in the wild after the last wild animals were hunted in Poland during World War I, but survived in captivity.[76] It was reintroduced to the Altai in 1982-1984.
Arabian oryxOryx leucoryxArabian PeninsulaExtinct in the wild in 1972 and reintroduced in Jiddat al-Harasis, Oman in 1980.[77]
Locally extinct
Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
MuskoxOvibos moschatusNorthern Eurasia and North AmericaMost recent remains in the Taymyr Peninsula, Russia dated to 615-555 BCE. It was reintroduced to the Bikada River area in the same region in 1974.[78]
Lesser kuduTragelaphus imberbisEast Africa and western Arabian PeninsulaNo skeletal remains known but appears in Holocene rock art from Saudi Arabia and possibly Jordan in numbers and detail suggestive of being a native species to the area. Recent presence in the Arabian Peninsula is controversial. In 1967, a pair of horns were claimed to have been taken from an animal shot in Jabal Halmayn, Yemen; another was shot in Nuqrah, Saudi Arabia in 1968. Some authors believe both were escapees from private collections,[79] others that the distance between the two locations is larger than it would be expected for introduced specimens.

Birds (class Aves)

Ostriches and fossil relatives (order Struthioniformes)

Ostriches (family Struthionidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
East Asian ostrichPachystruthio anderssoni[80] Lake Baikal to Yellow River[81] Eggshell fragments most recently dated to 7600-6245 BCE in Shabarakh-usu and Barun Daban, Mongolia.[82]
Arabian ostrichStruthio camelus syriacusNear East and Arabian PeninsulaLast confirmed individual killed in Jubail, Saudi Arabia around 1941; there was also a second-hand report of a dying animal north of Petra, Jordan in 1966. Its closest relative, the North African ostrich, was introduced as a substitute in Saudi Arabia in the 1990s.[83]

Landfowl (order Galliformes)

Pheasants and allies (family Phasianidae)

Possibly extinct

Waterfowl (order Anseriformes)

Ducks, geese, and swans (family Anatidae)

Possibly extinct
-- sortable-->"Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Pink-headed duckRhodonessa caryophyllaceaNorthern and eastern India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and MyanmarLast recorded in Bihar in 1948-1949. It was uncommon and non-migratory despite its vast range. Declined due to trophy hunting, as it was generally not considered good to eat, and habitat destruction.
Crested shelduckTadorna cristataPrimorye, Hokkaido, and South Korea; possibly North Korea and northeastern ChinaLast confirmed record in 1964.[84]

Pigeons and doves (order Columbiformes)

Pigeons and doves (family Columbidae)

-- sortable-->"Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Ryukyu wood pigeonColumba jouyiOkinawa, Kerama, and Daito Islands, JapanLast recorded on Okinawa in 1904 and on Daito in 1936, after a quick decline. The reason of extinction is unknown.[85]
Bonin wood pigeonColumba versicolorNakondo Shima and Chichi-jima, Bonin IslandsLast recorded in 1889. Likely extinct due to deforestation and predation by introduced rats and cats.[86]
Possibly extinct
-- sortable-->"Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Catanduanes bleeding heartGallicolumba luzonica rubiventrisCatanduanes, PhilippinesDescribed from one specimen collected in 1971. Recent sightings were reported in 2008, but its current status is unknown.
Sulu bleeding-heartGallicolumba menageiTawi-tawi, PhilippinesDescribed from two individuals collected in 1891, when it was considered extremely rare, but there were unconfirmed local reports in 1995 that it was abundant until the 1970s. Possibly became extinct due to hunting and deforestation.[87]
Negros fruit dovePtilinopus arcanusNegros Island, PhilippinesOnly known from the type specimen, a female, collected in 1953. Its mate was also shot but the body fell in the underbrush and could not be retrieved. Likely disappeared due to hunting and large escale deforestation of the island.

Rails and cranes (order Gruiformes)

Rails (family Rallidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeComments
Iwo Jima railAmaurornis cinerea brevipesNaka Iwo Jima and Minami Iwo Jima, Bonin IslandsLast recorded in 1925, though the last "official sighting" was in 1911.
Bornean Baillon's crakePorzana pusilla miraBorneoOnly collected once in 1912.

Cranes (family Gruidae)

Locally extinct

Shorebirds (order Charadriiformes)

Plovers, dotterels, and lapwings (family Charadriidae)

Possibly extinct

Sandpipers (family Scolopacidae)

Possibly extinct

Buttonquails (family Turnicidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeComments
Tawi-tawi buttonquailTurnix sylvaticus suluensisJolo and Tawi-tawi, PhilippinesLast recorded in the 1950s. It could have disappeared due to severe deforestation and introduced predators.
Turnix sp.TimorMost recent remains dated to 650 CE.

Boobies, cormorants, and relatives (order Suliformes)

Cormorants and shags (family Phalacrocoracidae)

Pelicans, herons, and ibises (order Pelecaniformes)

Herons (family Ardeidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Bennu heronArdea bennuidesArabian PeninsulaMost recent remains at Umm Al Nar, United Arab Emites, dated to around 2500 BCE. It possibly disappeared due to wetland degradation.[91]
Bonin nankeen night heronNycticorax caledonicus crassirostrisChichi-jima and Nakōdo-jima, Bonin IslandsLast collected in 1889. The cause of extinction is unknown.

Ibises and spoonbills (family Threskiornithidae)

Locally extinct in the wild

Hawks and relatives (order Accipitriformes)

Hawks, eagles, kites, harriers and Old World vultures (family Accipitridae)

Owls (order Strigiformes)

True owls (family Strigidae)

Possibly extinct

Barn-owls (family Tytonidae)

Possibly extinct
-- sortable-->"Common nameScientific nameRangeComments
Natuna Bay owlPhodilus badius arixuthusBunguran Island, IndonesiaKnown only from the holotype described in 1932.[96] The reasons of extinction are unclear.
Samar bay owlPhodilus badius riveraeSamar Island, PhilippinesOnly known from the holotype described in 1927 and lost in the destruction of the Bureau of Science in Manila in 1945. It has been ruled invalid by some authors because the original description (as the full species Phodilus riverae) did not include comparison with other subspecies.

Hornbills and hoopoes (order Bucerotiformes)

Hornbills (family Bucerotidae)

Kingfishers and relatives (order Coraciiformes)

Kingfishers (family Alcedinidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Sangihe dwarf kingfisherCeyx fallax sangirensisSangihe Island, IndonesiaLast recorded in 1997. Likely extinct due to deforestation caused by intense logging and agriculture.
Ryukyu kingfisherTodiramphus cinnamominus miyakoensisMiyako Island, Ryukyu, JapanOnly known from the holotype collected in 1887. Its exact nature is suspect, as the island is unsuitable for kingfishers, the bill's sheath is missing from the holotype, and the length of flight feathers noted in the original description may have been an artefact of preservation. Otherwise the type is similar to the Guam kingfisher.

Woodpeckers and allies (order Piciformes)

Woodpeckers (family Picidae)

Parrots (order Psittaciformes)

Old World parrots (family Psittaculidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Cebu hanging parrotLoriculus philippensis chrysonotusCebu, PhilippinesThe last individuals in captivity died in London in 1943, after being caught in the wild in 1929. The date of extinction in the wild is unclear, but was likely caused by widespread deforestation in the 19th and 20th centuries. 2004 reports likely belonged to other subspecies subsequently introduced to the island.
Siquijor hanging parrotLoriculus philippensis siquijorensisSiquijor, PhilippinesLast recorded in 1908; a claimed individual collected in 1954 was actually a escaped cage bird. The subspecies likely disappeared due to deforestation and capture for the pet trade.

Perching birds (order Passeriformes)

Cuckooshrikes (family Campephagidae)

Possibly extinct

Swallows (family Hirundinidae)

Possibly extinct

Monarch flycatchers (family Monarchidae)

Possibly extinct

Old World flycatchers (family Muscicapidae)

Possibly extinct

White-eyes (family Zosteropidae)

Reptiles (class Reptilia)

Crocodilians (order Crocodilia)

Crocodiles (family Crocodylidae)

Locally extinct

Gharials (family Gavialidae)

Squamates (order Squamata)

Monitor lizards (family Varanidae)

Turtles and tortoises (order Testudines)

Tortoises (family Testudinidae)

Amphibians (class Amphibia)

Frogs (order Anura)

Shrub frogs (family Rhacophoridae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Sri Lanka bubble-nest frogPseudophilautus adspersusNuwara Eliya, Sri LankaLast collected in 1886. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss due to agriculture has been suggested.[104]
Pseudophilautus dimbullaeDimbula, Sri LankaKnown only from holotypes collected in 1933. The causes of extinction are unknown, but habitat loss has been suggested.[105] [106]
Pseudophilautus eximius
Pseudophilautus extirpoSri LankaLast recorded in 1882. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss has been suggested.[107]
Pseudophilautus halyiPattipola, Sri LankaOnly known from the holotype collected in 1899. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss has been suggested.[108]
Whitenose bubble-nest frogPseudophilautus leucorhinusSri LankaOnly known from the holotype collected before 1856. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss has been suggested.[109]
Pseudophilautus maiaRamboda, Sri LankaOnly known from two specimens collected in 1876 or earlier. Possibly disappeared when the local forest was cleared in 1978, which also resulted in the extinction of the endemic tree Albizia lankaensis.[110]
Pseudophilautus malcolmsmithiSri LankaOnly known from the holotype collected in 1927. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss has been suggested.[111]
Pseudophilautus nanusSouthern Sri LankaOnly known from the lectotype collected in 1869. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss has been suggested.[112]
Sharp-nosed bush frogPseudophilautus nasutusSri LankaLast recorded in 1869; later observations in Sri Lanka and Southern India are misidentifications. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss has been suggested.[113]
Pseudophilautus oxyrhynchusSri LankaOnly known from the lectotype collected in 1872. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss has been suggested.[114]
Pseudophilautus pardusSri LankaOnly known from the holotype collected before 1859. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss due to agriculture has been suggested.[115]
Pseudophilautus rugatusTaralanda, Sri LankaOnly known from the holotype collected in 1927. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss due to agriculture has been suggested.[116]
Pseudophilautus temporalisSri LankaOnly known from the lectotype and type series collected in 1864. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss due to agriculture has been suggested.[117]
Variable bush frogPseudophilautus variabilisSri LankaOnly known from the lectotype collected in 1858. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss due to agriculture has been suggested.[118]
Pseudophilautus zalSri LankaNot recorded since before 1947. The cause of extinction is unknown, but habitat loss due to agriculture has been suggested.[119]
Pseudophilautus zimmeriPoint de Galle, Sri LankaNot recorded since 1927. The given range is now heavily urbanized, suggesting habitat destruction as the reason of extinction.[120]

Salamanders (order Urodela)

True salamanders and newts (family Salamandridae)

Ray-finned fish (class Actinopterygii)

Sturgeons and paddlefishes (order Acipenseriformes)

Sturgeons (family Acipenseridae)

Locally extinct

Paddlefishes (family Polyodontidae)

Herrings and anchovies (order Clupeiformes)

Herrings (family Clupeidae)

Possibly extinct

Minnows and allies (order Cypriniformes)

Carps, minnows, and relatives (family Cyprinidae)

Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
Beyşehir bleakAlburnus akiliLake Beyşehir, TurkeyExtinct due to predation by zanders introduced in 1955. It could also have hybridized with the also introduced Sakarya bleak.[129]
Anabarilius macrolepisYilong Lake, Yunnan, ChinaDisappeared when the lake dried completely for 20 days in 1981, as a result of water substraction.[130]
PaitBarbodes amarusLake Lanao, PhilippinesLast recorded in 1982. Disappeared along with most of the original ichthyofauna of the lake (see below) due to excesive and unsustainable fishing practices such as dynamite fishing, extraction of water for industrial, agricultural, and domestic use; illegal logging and pollution, and predation by accidentally introduced tank goby and snakehead gudgeon. The latter species is now the most common fish in the lake.[131]
BaolanBarbodes baoulanLast recorded in 1991.[132]
BaganganBarbodes clemensiLast recorded in 1975.[133]
Barbodes disaLast recorded in 1964.[134]
Katapa-tapaBarbodes flavifuscusLast recorded in 1964.[135]
Barbodes herreiLast recorded in 1974.[136]
Barbodes katoloLast recorded in 1977.[137]
KandarBarbodes lanaoensisLast recorded in 1964.[138]
Barbodes manalakLast recorded in 1977.[139]
BitunguBarbodes pachycheilusLast recorded in 1964.[140]
Barbodes palaemophagusLast recorded in 1975.[141]
Barbodes palataLast recorded in 1964.[142]
Bagangan sa erunganBarbodes resimusLast recorded in 1964.[143]
Barbodes trasLast recorded in 1976.[144]
BitunguBarbodes truncatulusLast recorded in 1973.[145]
Yilong carpCyprinus yilongensisYilong Lake, Yunnan, ChinaDisappeared when the lake dried completely for 20 days in 1981, as a result of water substraction.[146]
Hula breamMirogrex hulensisLake Hula, IsraelDisappeared in 1957-1963, after most of the lake was drained to turn the bottom into farmland.[147]
Schizothorax saltansTalas River basin, KazakhstanLast recorded in 1953. Disappeared due to habitat loss caused by water substraction, high pollution, and fishing.[148]
Possibly extinct
Scientific nameRangeComments
Barbodes cataractaeMisamis Occidental and Lake Lanao, PhilippinesThe holotype was collected in an unidentified river in Misamis Occidental in 1934. It was only known from Lake Lanao otherwise, and was last recorded there before 1973.[149]
Barbodes lindogLake Lanao, PhilippinesLast recorded in 2008.[150]
Barbodes sirangLast recorded in 2007.[151]

Catfishes (order Siluriformes)

Schilbid catfishes (family Schilbeidae)

Salmon, trout and relatives (order Salmoniformes)

Salmon, trout and relatives (family Salmonidae)

Extinct in the wild
Common nameScientific nameRangeCommentsPictures
KunimasuOncorhynchus kawamuraeLake Tazawa, JapanExtirpated from its original range in 1940, when acidic water was released to the lake during the construction of hydroelectric power infrastructure. Survives in Lake Saiko, where the species was introduced in 1935.[153]
BeloribitsaStenodus leucichthysCaspian Sea, Volga, Ural, and Terek River drainagesLast recorded in the Ural in the 1960s. All spawning grounds were lost after dams were built in the Volga, Ural, and Terek river drainages. The species continues to exist in captivity, from which it is released periodically in its native range. However, illegal fishing and hybridization with the introduced nelma remain threats to its survival.[154]

Gobies and relatives (order Gobiiformes)

Gobies (family Gobiidae)

Possibly extinct
Common nameScientific nameRangeComments
BiaExyrias volcanusTaal Lake, PhilippinesLast recorded in 1927. Possibly disappeared due to overfishing, pollution, habitat degradation, and invasive species among other reasons.[155] [156]
Yellow-bellied gobySilhouettea flavoventris

Cichlids and convict blennies (order Cichliformes)

Cichlids (family Cichlidae)

Scientific nameRangeComments
Tristramella intermediaLake Hula, IsraelDisappeared when the lake and most adjacent marshes were drained in the 1970s.[157]
Tristramella magdelainaeDamascus, SyriaLast collected in the 1950s. Possibly disappeared due to drought, pollution, and water extraction.[158]

Silversides and rainbowfishes (order Atheriniformes)

Priapium fishes (family Phallostethidae)

Possibly extinct

Cartilaginous fish (class Chondrichthyes)

Ground sharks (order Carcharhiniformes)

Requiem sharks (family Carcharhinidae)

Possibly extinct

Shovelnose rays and allies (order Rhinopristiformes)

Sawfishes (family Pristidae)

Locally extinct

Insects (class Insecta)

Dragonflies and damselflies (order Odonata)

White-legged damselflies (family Platycnemididae)

Possibly extinct

Beetles (order Coleoptera)

Ground beetles (family Carabidae)

Slugs and snails (class Gastropoda)

Scientific nameRange
Lamellidea monodontaBonin Islands, Japan[164] [165]
Lamellidea nakadai
Scientific nameRange
Vitrinula chaunaxBonin Islands, Japan[166] [167] [168]
Vitrinula chichijimana
Vitrinula hahajimana

Whorl snails (family Vertiginidae)

Scientific nameRange
Gastrocopta chichijimanaBonin Islands, Japan[172] [173]
Gastrocopta ogasawarana

See also

External links

Notes and References

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