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In December 2006, scientists reported that
the Baiji, a freshwater dolphin found only in the Yangtze River
of China, was probably extinct after a 6-week search failed to
find a single animal. The loss of this 20 million year old species
is the first dolphin to be driven to extinction by humans. With
the likely extinction of the Baiji, the Vaquita, a porpoise found
only in the waters of the northern Gulf of California, Mexico,
now becomes the most critically endangered species in the world.
With a population of 200-300 animals and numbers declining, its
future is uncertain. Bookmark this page to learn what you can
do to turn the tides and help save the vaquita.
Vaquita (“little cow”) is the name used
by local fishermen in the northern Gulf of California, Mexico
to describe the world’s smallest porpoise. First described in
1958, the vaquita is the most critically endangered small marine
mammal on the planet. Known only from a small localized area near
San Felipe and Roca Consag in the upper Gulf of California, the
vaquita occurs singly or in small groups and feeds upon small
fishes and squids in the shallow waters. The main human-caused
problem affecting the species is incidental mortality in fishing
gear set for shark, fish and shrimp.