Campo Grande, Brazil, 29 March 2026 — Confronted with stark new evidence that many migratory species are moving closer to extinction, governments at a major UN wildlife conservation meeting today agreed on expanded conservation efforts, including new or enhanced treaty protections for 40 species and populations of birds, aquatic wildlife, and terrestrial animals.
Meeting in Brazil, Parties to the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) adopted several measures to strengthen global or regional conservation efforts of such iconic species as the cheetah, striped hyena, snowy owl, giant otter, great hammerhead shark, and several shorebird species facing steep population declines (lists appended).
Parties agreed to list the 40 additional species or populations of species on CMS Appendices I (species in danger of extinction) or II (species in need of coordinated international action), which now include over 1,200 unique species under the 47-year-old Convention.
They also approved multi-species conservation plans in key regions such as the Amazon.
The week-long CMS COP15 opened with new findings that key indicators for many treaty-protected species continue to trend downward, reinforcing warnings that habitat loss, overexploitation, and infrastructure barriers are accelerating declines across species that traverse national borders.
The conference also highlighted a growing need to address threats such as deep-sea mining, climate change, plastic pollution, underwater noise, illegal wildlife killing, fisheries bycatch, and marine pollution.
CMS COP15 began with strong political and scientific warnings: migratory species are in accelerating decline and international cooperation is required to effectively respond.
The
State of the World’s Migratory Species: Interim Report (2026)
report underlined that
key biodiversity indicators are trending negatively
, with rising extinction risk and population declines
Scientific and political leaders, including Presidents Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil and Santiago Peña of Paraguay, underlined threats such as habitat fragmentation, bycatch, illegal killing, and infrastructure barriers
Parties emphasized ecological connectivity, international cooperation, expanded partnerships with CITES, IPBES, and other multilateral agreements
There was a strong push to integrate Indigenous and local knowledge into scientific considerations, with a parallel debate on how to balance scientific rigor with multiple knowledge systems
Said CMS Executive Secretary Amy Fraenkel: “We came to Campo Grande knowing that the populations of half the species protected under this treaty are in decline. We leave with stronger protections and more ambitious plans but the species themselves are not waiting for our next meeting. Implementation has to begin tomorrow. Expanded protections for striped hyena, snowy owls, giant otters, great hammerhead sharks, and many more, demonstrate that nations can act when the science is clear. Our duty now is to close the distance between what we’ve agreed and what happens on the ground for these animals.”
Said João Paulo Capobianco, Chair of COP15 and Executive Secretary, Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change, Brazil; “We protect species that may never remain within our borders. We invest in a natural heritage we do not own, but are all responsible for. In doing so, we give concrete meaning to global solidarity, recognizing that migratory species transcend nations, jurisdictions, and generations. From the Pantanal to the Arctic, from the oceans to the savannas, migratory species connect our planet in ways no political map ever could. They remind us that ecological integrity depends on continuity on flows that must remain alive, uninterrupted, and resilient."
With the conclusion of COP15, the Government of Brazil now holds the mantle of the CMS COP Presidency and will carry the momentum from this meeting into the next three years, not only in South America but also for all regions of the world, for the conservation of migratory species and their habitats.
16 new Concerted Actions approved:
Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) Behavioral Diversity and Cultures
Straw-colored Fruit Bat (Eidolon helvum)
Eurasian Lynx (Lynx lynx)
Striped Hyena (Hyaena hyaena)
Giraffes: Masai giraffe (Giraffa tippelskirchi), northern giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis), reticulated giraffe (Giraffa reticulata) and southern giraffe (Giraffa giraffa)
Sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) of the Eastern Tropical Pacific
Franciscana Dolphin (Pontoporia blainvillei)
Lahille Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus gephyreus)
Antipodean Albatross (Diomedea antipodensis)
Flesh-footed Shearwater (Ardenna carneipes)
Peruvian or Humboldt Pelican (Pelecanus thagus)
Magellanic plover (Pluvianellus socialis)
Sand Tiger Shark (Carcharias taurus)
Basking Shark (Cetorhinus maximus)
Blue Shark (Prionace glauca)
All Devil and Manta Ray species (Mobulidae)
Report on previous Concerted Actions:
Giraffe: The report of the Giraffe Conservation Foundation on the Concerted Action for giraffes highlighted that the combined number of the four giraffe species increased ~20% from ~113,000 to ~140,000 between 2020 and 2025.
10 new or updated species-focused Action Plans:
Regional Action Plan for Jaguar Conservation
Single Species Action Plan for the Northeast Atlantic and Mediterranean Sub-Population of the Tope Shark
Multi-species Action Plan for Amazonian Migratory Catfish
Single Species Action Plan for European Eel
Conservation Management Plan for Arabian Sea Humpback Whales
Multi-Species Action Plan for Bustards
Steppe Eagle Global Action Plan
Action Plan for Migratory Landbirds in the African-Eurasian Region
Action Plans for Birds
Conservation of African-Eurasian Vultures
New initiative on the illegal and unsustainable taking of migratory species (detailed here: Global initiative to address mounting pressures from illegal and unsustainable taking of migratory species announced at UN wildlife conference)
Groundbreaking new scientific studies and tools unveiled, including:
The Global Assessment of Migratory Freshwater Fishes (detailed here: Vital freshwater fish migrations are collapsing: UN report)
An Online Atlas of the Americas Flyways (detailed here:
New UN-backed atlas maps migratory lifelines of highly vulnerable bird species across the Americas
)
9 new champions of migratory species recognized for their long-term and sustained commitments in supporting conservation initiatives (detailed here)
COP15 decided that the next conference will take place in Germany. The Federal Government of Germany—depository of the Convention and host of the CMS Secretariat—had offered to host COP16 in Bonn in 2029. COP16 will coincide with the 50th anniversary of the Convention, also known as the Bonn Convention, which was signed in Bonn in June 1979.
Terrestrial
Added to Appendix I and II
Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) – Zimbabwe’s cheetah population, estimated at 150 to 170 individuals. Other populations were already listed on Appendix I.
Striped hyena (Hyaena hyaena)
Avian
Added to Appendix I and II:
Gadfly petrels (genera Pterodroma and Pseudobulweria): 16 added to Appendix II (15 species, plus two subspecies) 9 added to Appendix I
Added to Appendix II:
Snowy owl (Bubo scandiacus)
Flesh-footed shearwater (Ardenna carneipes)
Iberá seedeater (Sporophila iberaensis) – added to Appendix II
Added to Appendix I:
Hudsonian whimbrel (Numenius phaeopus hudsonicus)
Hudsonian godwit (Limosa haemastica)
Lesser yellowlegs (Tringa flavipes)
Aquatic
Added to Appendix I and II
Giant otter (Pteronura brasiliensis)
Added to Appendix II:
Patagonian narrownose smoothhound (Mustelus schmitti)
Spotted sorubim (Pseudoplatystoma corruscans)
Added to Appendix I (while maintaining their status under Appendix II):
Pelagic thresher shark, bigeye thresher shark and common thresher shark (Alopias pelagicus, Alopias superciliosus, Alopias vulpinus)
Scalloped hammerhead shark (Sphyrna lewini)
Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran)
Correction: An earlier version of this press release misstated the number of Concerted Actions adopted at COP15; there were 16, not 15, including the Concerted Action for Giraffes.