A Species on the Brink
The vaquita, a small porpoise species found only in the upper Gulf of California, became severely critically endangered in 1996, leading up to approximately 10 remaining in 2023. Such a tiny population makes recovery incredibly difficult due to inbreeding and vulnerability to random events.

The vaquita is critically endangered for several reasons, with the biggest threat being bycatch from illegal fishing.
The main cause of vaquita deaths is getting accidentally caught in gillnets, especially those set to catch totoaba, an endangered fish prized for its swim bladder in traditional Chinese medicine. When trapped, the vaquitas drown because they can’t reach the surface to breathe. Although totoaba fishing is illegal, it continues due to high black market prices. This illegal trade brings more gillnets into vaquita habitat.
Geography and Weak Enforcement
Another reason for the vaquitas to become endangered is due to their tendency of only living in a small area of the northern Gulf of California in Mexico, making them especially vulnerable to localized threats. Even though Mexico has banned gillnets in the vaquita’s habitat, enforcement has been weak, and illegal fishing continues.
Human Greed and the Call to Action
Nowadays, the corrupt aspect of human society is that individuals’ primary motivation is wealth, even at the cost of ethics and integrity. Many are willing to engage in harmful or illegal activities, such as trafficking endangered species or polluting ecosystems, all for profit. This obsession with money and leisure has blinded people to the true value of the natural world. It is essential that we shift our priorities and learn to appreciate the beauty of Earth’s nature.
The future of all life depends on the choices we make today.
<Jaymin Park Student Reporter>Palos Verdes High School jpola0412@gmail.com
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