JakartaPost-Oct 1, 2021

The recent move by Switzerland-based organization the International Union for Conservation (IUCN), to list Komodo dragons, the world’s largest living lizards, as one of the world’s endangered species should be further scrutinized, Indonesian scientists have said. The IUCN, in the latest edition of the “Red List of Threatened Species” published in early September, moved the Komodo dragons to endangered status, which the organization reserves for species facing threats of extinction in the wild. The IUCN reasoned that the status change – the first in 25 years since the organization assessed the species was “vulnerable”,  a notch below its current status, in 1996 – could be attributed to rising sea levels caused by climate change, which was expected to reduce the Komodo dragon’s viable habitat by 30 percent in the next 45 years. Local activists have raised concerns over the potentially harmful impacts of government projects, which received widespread attention last year after a viral photo showed two construction workers looking on from the top of their truck as they faced a Komodo dragon on Rinca Island. Read more at: https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2021/10/01/climate-change-or-human-activities-scientists-debate-threats-to-komodo-dragons.html.