How To Get The Racing Extinction Lesson Plans
For those who want to watch the film, it is available on iTunes, Amazon, and Google. The lesson plans, available here, provide interactive lessons that engage students on the importance of biodiversity on our planet. Discovery Education and Vulcan Productions also joined in to help create the lessons, which include video clips from the documentary, Racing Extinction, while generating excitement and enthusiasm in the classroom.
Also available at the link above is a form for teachers to fill out if they would like to host a screening as well as downloadable classroom posters.
Not A Teacher? Here’s How You Can Help
Awareness is always fundamental, and Racing Extinction’s website has several waysyou can take part in spreading awareness — from education about where your food comes from, to its campaign “Protect The Endangered Species Act,” which is the last line of defense to keep wildlife that is on the brink of extinction from going extinct. This campaign is critical due to the fact that our current administration and many members of Congress no longer see science as important — they have either been dismantling environmental protection laws or creating bills that would slash the Endangered Species Act.
“Members of Congress are disregarding science and proposing bills to slash the Endangered Species Act, threatening the existence of the imperiled wildlife the act protects.” — Racing Extinction.
In 2019, the Trump administration weakened the applicationof the Endangered Species Act and ordered changes that help speed up the loss of animals and plants — which is insane especially since there have been massive global extinctions already. The protections that have been targeted by Trump include water, air, and public lands.
New Species Of Shark Discovered — May Already Be Extinct
A new shark species that scientists have just discovered could already be lost — extinct. This “lost shark” was in the heavily fished South China Sea and was only just discovered last year. So far, there have been no sightings and it hasn’t shown up in surveys, which prompted the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) to list it as critically endangered and possibly extinct.
Will White, an ichthyologist at the Australian National Fish Collection, noted that this could be the first shark extinction in human times. “Unfortunately, what makes a species a great survivor in the natural world doesn’t equate to making them great survivors against man,” he said.
Simon Walmsley, chief marine advisor at WWF-UK, shared his thoughts on how alarming this decline in sharks and rays is. We’ve been witnessing the alarming decline in sharks and rays for the last two decades, and yet the unsustainable fishing of these crucial species has continued unabated.” He added that, “These animals have evolved over 400 million years, and sadly we’re now pushing them to the brink of extinction.”
The rays Walmsley mentioned were in reference to the inclusion of stingrays in the 316 species of shark, rays, skates, and chimeras that are included in the Red List of species in trouble. There are a total of 128,918 animal, plant, and fungi species that are assessed by the IUCN, and over a quarter are threatened with extinction.
The IUCN, which is typically conservative on extinctions, often uses the term “possibly extinct” because declaring a species extinct could end any remaining protection efforts — so, in most cases, many species that are listed as “possibly extinct,” are most likely extinct. The IUCN recently listed an Amazon dolphin with a pink-tinted belly, the tucuxi, to its endangered species list. The tucuxi is being killed by dams, pollution, and gill nets, which are vast curtains of fishing nets that dangle in the river’s currents.
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