The Cute and the Damned
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The long-beaked echidna does not share much in common with the golden-rumped elephant shrew, although both are endangered. Despite living on the edge of extinction, however, they’re both largely overlooked by the conservation world—mostly because they’re weird.
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But thanks to a new program from the Zoological Society of London, a homely face will no longer be a barrier to conservation protection. The Edge of Existence program, which aims to protect “Evolutionarily Distinct and Globally Endangered†(EDGE) animals, offers vital attention to a prioritized list of the not-so-cute but critically endangered creatures, a whopping 70 percent of which are largely ignored by the conservation community.
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The program’s Top 10 focus species for 2008 include such peculiar animals as the Bumblebee Bat (“possibly the world’s smallest mammalâ€), the Long-Eared Jerboa (“a mouse-like animal with the largest ear-to-body ratio of any mammalâ€) and the Slender Loris (a “shy nocturnal primate with gigantic eyesâ€). The program does not discriminate against a pretty face, though, and some more popular creatures such as elephants and pandas have reached priority status as well.
The program works to protect EDGE creatures through scientific research, education and protection strategies. So far, nine EDGE Fellows, who hail from the same regions as the creatures they study, are busy finalizing their project plans and conducting research in the field.
For the long-beaked echidna, EDGE scientists may have arrived just in time. Although many conservationists had assumed that this porcupine-like creature had already slipped into extinction, an EDGE team discovered that it still survives in the Cyclops Mountains of Papua, Indonesia.

The nocturnal Slender Loris teeters on the edge of extinction.




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