Number Ten: Tasmanian Tiger.
Extinct since 1936, the Tasmanian tiger was a threat to farmers because it would hunt their sheep, so to fight it, farmers began hunting it. It was trapped and poisoned for government bounties and eventually went extinct because of this.
Number Nine: Woolly Mammoth.
The woolly mammoth roamed the earth for 250,000 years before going extinct. A recent study revealed that human hunting was the straw that broke the camels' - or woolly mammoth's - back, as a species.
Number Eight: Dodo Bird.
The Dodo birds lived for …show more content…
This seal-like creature was hunted for its meat and fat, but humans went overboard in hunting it. It was hunted at more than seven times the sustainable limit and entered extinction in the year 1768.
Number Six: Passenger Pigeon.
There used to be billions of passenger pigeons roaming the earth, but now there are none. Dude to deforestation and over-hunting, the passenger pigeon went extinct in 1914.
Number Five: Bubal Hartebeest.
A species of antelope, the bubal hartebeest was hunted for its meat. Unfortunately, the species could not cope with human hunting and entered extinction around 1954.
Number Four: Javan Tiger.
During the 19th century, the Javan tiger was king of the Indonesian island of Java. Humans eventually overtook the tiger's environment and cleared out everything on which the tigers depended.
Number Three: Zanzibar Leopard.
Extinct since the 1990s, the Zanzibar leopard was a subspecies of leopard that only lived in part of Tanzania. The leopard was an unfortunate victim of natives who believed the leopards were related to witches who wanted to scare other natives.
Number Two: Pyrenean