About Endling
An endling is the last individual of a species. Endling is a catalog of them — documented case files of animals and plants that went extinct, traced from what they were to the death of the very last one, with the dates, places, and sources that separate the real record from the myth.
What you'll find here
- Species that went from billions to zero — and the named bird, tortoise, or tiger that died last
- Where and when the endling died, and who was there to record it
- Exactly what drove each one down: hunting, habitat loss, invasive species, disease
- Contested cases — "last individual" claims that are disputed or were later overturned
- What came after: museum specimens, protective laws, and de-extinction attempts
Every entry follows the same structure: a summary, a decline timeline, a "Profile" of the species, "The Decline," and "The Endling" — the last known individual — then why it vanished, the aftermath, and the lessons, sourced from the IUCN Red List, museum records, scientific literature, and contemporary accounts.
Extinction is usually told as a number. Telling it one named last individual at a time is how you see what the number actually means.
Sister sites
Endling is part of The Vanished — a family of sites cataloging the last of everything: