506 species documented. Each one racing against a clock that keeps speeding up. Real information about real stakes.
Every coloured marker represents a species fighting for survival in its home range.
Every one of these species could be the last generation. These are their stories.
Choose a species to follow and receive real conservation updates — not spam, not newsletters, just the facts that matter.
The Last Ones exists because species are going extinct faster than most people understand, and the information available is scattered across academic databases, government reports, and institutional websites that were not designed to be read by anyone who is not already an expert.
We are building the most complete, most accessible record of Earth's endangered species — not as an archive, but as a living document. Every species page is actively maintained. When population estimates change, when conservation efforts succeed or fail, when new threats emerge — we update the record.
This is not a catalogue of loss. Many of the species on this site are recovering. The mountain gorilla is increasing. The bald eagle came back from the brink. The black rhino is growing. Conservation works when it is adequately funded, and adequately funded requires public attention, and public attention requires accessible information.