Narwhal conservation status

The narwhal currently holds a status of Least Concern on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature Red List, a classification based on a global population estimated at well over 100,000 mature individuals. This designation reflects the species' abundance relative to extinction thresholds, yet it masks vulnerabilities that conservationists and researchers view with increasing concern.

Narwhals are among the Arctic marine mammals most exposed to climate change because their survival depends heavily on sea-ice habitat. As ice extent and seasonality shift across the Arctic, the species faces cascading pressures on its highly specialized ecology. Traditional subsistence hunting in Canada and Greenland remains regulated through carefully managed catch quotas, but contemporary conservation efforts have begun to pivot toward broader environmental stressors that threaten individual populations regardless of harvest levels.
Modern threats to narwhal subpopulations include warming waters that may alter the distribution and availability of prey species, increasing commercial shipping traffic in Arctic waters with associated underwater noise and physical collision risk, and the acoustic disturbance of their communication and echolocation. These pressures vary in intensity across different narwhal communities, making region-specific monitoring and adaptive management essential.
The Least Concern classification indicates that narwhals are not presently at immediate risk of extinction, but their dependence on sea-ice ecosystems means their long-term security is inextricably linked to Arctic environmental stability.
Sources: IUCN Red List — Narwhal (Monodon monoceros); NAMMCO — Narwhal; NOAA Fisheries — Narwhal. Educational information only. See our sources & fact-check policy.
Frequently asked questions
IUCN status of the narwhal conservation status?
Least Concern
Global population of the narwhal conservation status?
~120,000+ mature individuals
Key vulnerability of the narwhal conservation status?
High reliance on sea ice
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