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Danger sign: species such as the endemic red-backed poison dart frog could be at greater threat from Amazonian deforestation than thought.

The vast majority of species extinctions in the Brazilian Amazon are yet to come, predicts a paper published in Science today.

Deforestation has declined to record lows in recent years, and just over 50% of Brazil’s rainforest now falls under some form of protected status. But the effects of habitat loss take time to manifest. “Cutting down trees doesn’t kill a bird directly. It takes a lot of time for those birds to actually die. They’re all crammed into the habitat that’s left. Then gradually you’ll have this increased mortality,” says Robert Ewers, an ecologist at Imperial College London and the study's leader.

To read the full, original article click on this link: Most of Amazon Rainforest's Species Extinctions Are Yet to Come: Scientific American