Tap a species for more

Each time a species disappears, our world unravels a bit more.

Each one of these used to live here and now they're gone.

If we don't act now, a million more species - turtles, fish, birds, butterflies, plants and wolves that we all love - could go extinct in the coming decades.

Save Life on Earth: click to take action

Share this map

click to start over

Thank you to the following people for providing reference images: Rubious cave amphipod: Tom J Devitt/UT Austin, Kansas bog lemming: Robert Wayne Van Devender, Catahoula salamander: Brad M. Glorioso, tawny crescent: Jeff Pippen jeffpippen.com, blue pike: Brydon Burrows bbfishin.ca, Robbins' milkvetch © Arthur Haines, Native Plant Trust.

Additional image credits: Black clubshell: Todd Amacker, Northern curlew: Cephas/Wikimedia CC BY-SA, Labrador duck: James St. John/Wikimedia CC BY, bigleaf scurfpea: Darrel Brown/iNaturalist CC BY-NC, Tatum Cave beetle: The Field Museum of Natural History CC BY-NC, Minnesota stripetail: Barry Walter/iNaturalist CC BY, Cardot's hook moss: Alexander Rumpel/iNaturalist CC BY-NC, Carolina parakeet: Huub Veldhuijzen van Zanten/Naturalis Biodiversity Center CC BY-SA, shiny fruit popcorn flower: Shane Hanofee/iNaturalist CC BY-NC, eelgrass limpet: Julie/iNaturalist CC BY-NC, passenger pigeon: James St. John CC BY, Big Thicket hog-nosed skunk: Gordon Karre/iNaturalist CC BY-NC, Snake River sucker: prickly_sculpin/iNaturalist, CC BY-NC. Other images: Public Domain.

Email Us