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List of extinct animals of the British Isles facts for kids

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This is a list of extinct animals of the British Isles. Only a small number of these are globally extinct, most famously the Irish elk, great auk and woolly mammoth. Most of the remainder survive to some extent outside the islands. The list includes introduced species only in cases where they were able to form self-sustaining colonies for a time. Only species extinct since Great Britain was separated from mainland Europe are included. The date beside each species is the last date when a specimen was observed in the wild or, where this is not known, the approximate date of extinction. The list is complete for mammals, reptiles, freshwater fish and amphibians.

Mammals

Birds

Fish

Amphibians

Reptiles

  • European pond terrapin – ≤ 3000 BC

Insects

Beetles

  • Agonum sahlbergi (ground beetle) – 1914
  • Blue stag beetle – 19th century
  • Graphoderus bilineatus (water beetle) – 1906
  • Harpalus honestus (ground beetle) – 1905
  • Horned dung beetle – 1957
  • Ochthebius aeneus (water beetle) – 1913
  • Platydema violaceum (tenebrionid) – 1957
  • Rhantus aberratus (water beetle) – 1904
  • Scybalicus oblongiusculus (ground beetle) – 1926
  • Teretrius fabricii (histerid) – 1907

Bees, wasps and ants

  • Andrena polita (mining bee) – 1934
  • Bombus pomorum, apple bumblebee – 1864
  • Bombus cullumanus, Cullum's bumblebee – 1941
  • Eucera tuberculata (mining bee) – 1941
  • Halictus maculatus (mining bee) – 1930
  • Mellinus crabroneus (digger wasp) – c. 1950
  • Odynerus reniformis (mason wasp) – 1915
  • Odynerus simillimus (mason wasp) – 1905
  • Short-haired bumblebee – 1989

Flies

  • Merodon clavipes

Butterflies and moths

General reference: Waring et al., 2009.

  • Aporia crataegi, black-veined white – 1925
  • Borkhausenia minutella – 1950
  • Conformist (moth) –
  • Euclemensia woodiella (moth) – 1829
  • Flame brocade (moth) – 1919
  • Frosted yellow (moth) – 1914
  • Gypsy moth – 1907; reappeared 1995
  • Isle of Wight wave (moth) – 1931
  • Large chequered skipper – c. 1989 (non-native, Channel Islands)
  • Large copper – 1865
  • Many-lined (moth) – 1875
  • Map – c. 1914 (non-native)
  • Mazarine blue – 1906
  • Orache moth – 1915
  • Reed tussock (moth) – 1875
  • Scarce black arches (moth) – 1898 (transitory resident)
  • Speckled beauty (moth) – 1898
  • Union rustic (moth) – 1919
  • Viper's bugloss (moth) –1969

Dragonflies and damselflies

  • Norfolk damselfly – 1957
  • Orange-spotted emerald (dragonfly) – 1957

Caddisflies

  • Hydropsyche bulgaromanorum (caddis fly) – 1926
  • Hydropsyche exocellata (caddis fly) – 1901

Crustaceans

  • Artemia salina (brine shrimp) – after 1758

Molluscs

Land snails

  • Fruticicola fruticum
  • Cernuella neglecta

† – Species is extinct worldwide

Reintroduction and re-establishment

The white-tailed eagle has been successfully re-established on the west coast of Scotland. Red kites have been successfully re-established in parts of England and Scotland. Ongoing projects involve both these species: the corncrake into parts of England and Scotland, and the great bustard on Salisbury Plain.

European beavers have been reintroduced to parts of Scotland, and there are plans to bring them back to other parts of Britain. A five-year trial reintroduction at Knapdale in Argyll started in 2009 and concluded in 2014. A few hundred beavers live wild in the Tay river basin, as a result of escapes from a wildlife park. A similar reintroduction trial is being undertaken on the River Otter in Devon, England. In 2016, beavers were recognised as a British native species, and will be protected under law.

In 2008, moose were released into a fenced reserve on the Alladale Estate in the Highlands of Scotland. Reindeer were re-established in 1952; approximately 150–170 reindeer live around the Cairngorms region in Scotland.

The northern clade pool frog was reintroduced from Swedish stock in 2005, to a single site in Norfolk, England, following detailed research to prove that it had been native prior to its extinction around 1993.

The large blue butterfly has been successfully re-established from Swedish stock at a number of sites, but few of these are open-access. There are also several successful cases of the establishment of new populations of heath fritillary.

There have been calls for the reintroduction of the lynx, brown bear and grey wolf to the UK.

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