Appendix 4
Department of Conservation Threat Levels
Source: http://www.doc.govt.nz/templates/MultiPageDocumentTOC.aspx?id=42704
Criteria - threat levels
The definitions displayed below outline the criteria for taxon that are acutely threatened, chronically threatened, and at risk of extinction. For a full explanation of all categories see pages 17 to 21 of DOC's publication: Classifying species according to threat of extinction (PDF, 570K) available via the Department's web page above.
- 1. Nationally critical
- Very small population or a very high predicted decline.
- 2. Nationally endangered
- Small population and moderate to high recent or predicted decline or small to moderate population and high recent or predicted decline.
- 3. Nationally vulnerable
- Small to moderate population and moderate recent or predicted decline.
- 4. Serious decline
- Moderate to large population and moderate to large predicted decline, or small to moderate population and small to moderate predicted decline.
- 5. Gradual decline
- Moderate to large population and small to moderate decline.
- 6. Sparse
- Taxa with very small, widely scattered populations.
- 7. Range restricted
- These taxa either occur in a small geographic area, are restricted to a particular habitat, or require very specific substrates, and for colonial breeders, have fewer than 10 subpopulations.
Qualifier definitions
Qualifiers provide additional information which adds meaning to the threat classification. They are an integral part of the classification of each taxon. There are eleven qualifiers listed below and when a taxon is listed all of the qualifiers that apply to it are recorded.
- 1. Extinct in the wild
- Exists only in cultivation or in captivity.
- 2. Conservation dependent
- Likely to move to a higher threat category if current management ceases.
- 3. Data poor
- Confidence in the listing is low due to the poor data available for assessment.
- 4. Recovering
- Total population showing a sustained recovery.
- 5. Stable
- Total population stable.
- 6. Secure overseas
- Secure in other parts of its natural range outside New Zealand.
- 7. Threatened overseas
- Threatened in those parts of its natural range outside New Zealand.
- 8. Human induced
- Present distribution is a result of direct or indirect human activity.
- 9. Recruitment failure
- Current population may appear stable but the age structure is such that catastrophic declines are likely in the future.
- 10. Extreme fluctuations
- Extreme unnatural population fluctuations or natural fluctuations overlaying human-induced declines that increase the threat of extinction.
- 11. One location
- Found at one location (geographically or ecologically distinct area) in which a single event (eg, a predator irruption) could soon affect all individuals of the taxon.
