| Show fishes in Australia with profiles available. | |
| Show all fishes of concern in Australia. |
| Common Name | Range *** |
|---|---|
| Adamson's Grunter | Papua New Guinea |
| Banded Eagle Ray | Australia |
| Baramundi Cod | Australia |
| Basking Shark | Australia |
| Bentfin Devil Ray | Australia |
| Bigeye Tuna | Australia |
| Black Cod | Australia, New Zealand |
| Black Mogurnda | Papua New Guinea |
| Black-blotched Stingray | Australia |
| Blacksaddled Coral Grouper | Australia |
| Blackspot Shark | Australia, Papua New Guinea |
| Blackspot Tuskfish | Australia |
| Blotched Mogurnda | Papua New Guinea |
| Bowmouth Guitarfish | Australia |
| Brindle Bass | Australia |
| Bronze Whaler | Australia |
| Brown-marbled Grouper | Australia |
| Brown-spotted Catshark | Australia, Papua New Guinea |
| Bumphead Parrotfish | Australia |
| Cairns Rainbowfish | Australia |
| Camouflage Grouper | Australia |
| Cape Shark | Australia |
| Common Sawfish | Australia |
| Common Seahorse | Australia |
| Common Shovelnose Ray | Australia |
| Coral Catshark | Papua New Guinea |
| Coral Trout | Australia, New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu |
| Deepwater Spiny Dogfish | Australia |
| Devil Fish | Australia |
| Dumb Gulper Shark | Australia (New South Wales, Tasmania, Victoria) |
| Eastern Angel Shark | Australia |
| Estuary Cod | Australia |
| Flat-faced Seahorse | Australia |
| Fossil Shark | Australia |
| Frilled Shark | Australia, New Zealand |
| Galapagos Shark | Australia |
| Giant Wrasse | Australia |
| Gray Nurse Shark | Australia |
| Great White Shark | Australia |
| Grey Bamboo Shark | Papua New Guinea |
| Hammerhead Shark | Australia |
| Hardnose Shark | Australia, Papua New Guinea |
| Hedgehog Seahorse | Australia (Queensland) |
| Japanese Devilray | Australia |
| Knifetooth Sawfish | Australia, Papua New Guinea |
| Largetooth Sawfish | Australia |
| Liver-oil Shark | Australia |
| Longfin Mako | Australia |
| Malabar Grouper | Australia |
| Murray Cod | Australia |
| New Guinea River Shark | Australia |
| Oceanic Whitetip Shark | Australia |
| Ogilby's Ghostshark | Australia |
| One-finned Shark | Australia |
| Ornate Eagle Ray | Australia (Northern Territory, Queensland, Western Australia) |
| Porcupine Ray | Australia |
| Portuguese Dogfish | Australia |
| Prickly Shark | Australia, New Zealand |
| Pygmy Devilray | Australia |
| Sharptooth Lemon Shark, Sicklefin Lemon Shark | Australia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu |
| Silver Perch | Australia |
| Smoothnose Wedgefish | Australia |
| Southern Bluefin Tuna | Australia |
| Speartooth Shark | Australia, Papua New Guinea |
| Spotted Eagle Ray | Australia |
| Spotted Handfish | Australia |
| Tasselled Wobbegong | Australia, Papua New Guinea |
| Tawny Nurse Shark | Australia |
| Variegated Mogurnda | Papua New Guinea |
| Whale Shark | Australia |
| White-spotted Guitarfish | Australia (Queensland) |
| Whitecheek Shark | Australia |
| Yellowback Stingaree | Australia |
| Zebra Shark | Australia |
Disclaimer:
This list combines species from several endangered species lists. Using the total
count of species found on this site as an official count of endangered species of the world is not recommended. For more
information on what creatures are listed on this site, please visit our About EEC page.
Latest Blog Articles
Armed conflict can harm wildlife in ways that are easy to miss at first. In Iran, one of the clearest environmental threats tied to the 2026 conflict is an oil slick moving toward the Hara Biosphere Reserve near the Strait of Hormuz. This protected wetland is an important habitat for marine life, birds, and coastal species, and scientists have warned that oil pollution could damage one of the most sensitive ecosystems in the region.
The Black Sea has become one of the clearest examples of how war can damage wildlife as well as people. Since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, scientists and conservation groups have warned that explosions, naval activity, pollution, and disrupted monitoring have all added new pressure to marine life in the region. One of the species drawing the most concern is the Black Sea bottlenose dolphin.
We shared the story of a rare white giraffe family years ago. Today, only the male is left. With a GPS tracker now guiding his safety, this unusual and beautiful creature continues his quiet journey across the savannah. |