From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

The Independent - Apr 30, 2007
http://news.independent.co.uk/environment/article2494659.ece

Sent by Michael McCarthy

Animal Extinction - the greatest threat to mankind

"But, as harmful as our forebears may have been, nothing compares to
what's under way today. Throughout the 20th century the causes of
extinction - habitat degradation, overexploitation, agricultural
monocultures, human-borne invasive species, human-induced
climate-change - increased exponentially, until now in the 21st century
the rate is nothing short of explosive."

By the end of the century half of all species will be extinct. 
Does that matter?

By Julia Whitty

In the final stages of dehydration the body shrinks, robbing youth from
the young as the skin puckers, eyes recede into orbits, and the tongue
swells and cracks. Brain cells shrivel and muscles seize. The kidneys
shut down. Blood volume drops, triggering hypovolemic shock, with its
attendant respiratory and cardiac failures. These combined assaults
disrupt the chemical and electrical pathways of the body until all
systems cascade toward death.

Such is also the path of a dying species. Beyond a critical point, the
collective body of a unique kind of mammal or bird or amphibian or tree
cannot be salvaged, no matter the first aid rendered. Too few
individuals spread too far apart, or too genetically weakened, are
susceptible to even small natural disasters: a passing thunderstorm; an
unexpected freeze; drought. At fewer than 50 members, populations
experience increasingly random fluctuations until a kind of fatal
arrhythmia takes hold. Eventually, an entire genetic legacy, born in
the beginnings of life on earth, is removed from the future.

Scientists recognise that species continually disappear at a background
extinction rate estimated at about one species per million per year,
with new species replacing the lost in a sustainable fashion.
Occasional mass extinctions convulse this orderly norm, followed by
excruciatingly slow recoveries as new species emerge from the remaining
gene-pool, until the world is once again repopulated by a different
catalogue of flora and fauna.

>From what we understand so far, five great extinction events have
reshaped earth in cataclysmic ways in the past 439 million years, each
one wiping out between 50 and 95 per cent of the life of the day,
including the dominant life forms; the most recent event killing off
the non-avian dinosaurs. Speciations followed, but an analysis
published in Nature showed that it takes 10 million years before
biological diversity even begins to approach what existed before a
die-off.

Today we're living through the sixth great extinction, sometimes known
as the Holocene extinction event. We carried its seeds with us 50,000
years ago as we migrated beyond Africa with Stone Age blades, darts,
and harpoons, entering pristine Ice Age ecosystems and changing them
forever by wiping out at least some of the unique megafauna of the
times, including, perhaps, the sabre-toothed cats and woolly mammoths.
When the ice retreated, we terminated the long and biologically rich
epoch sometimes called the Edenic period with assaults from our newest
weapons: hoes, scythes, cattle, goats, and pigs.

But, as harmful as our forebears may have been, nothing compares to
what's under way today. Throughout the 20th century the causes of
extinction - habitat degradation, overexploitation, agricultural
monocultures, human-borne invasive species, human-induced
climate-change - increased exponentially, until now in the 21st century
the rate is nothing short of explosive. The World Conservation Union's
Red List - a database measuring the global status of Earth's 1.5
million scientifically named species - tells a haunting tale of
unchecked, unaddressed, and accelerating biocide.

When we hear of extinction, most of us think of the plight of the rhino,
tiger, panda or blue whale. But these sad sagas are only small pieces
of the extinction puzzle. The overall numbers are terrifying. Of the
40,168 species that the 10,000 scientists in the World Conservation
Union have assessed, one in four mammals, one in eight birds, one in
three amphibians, one in three conifers and other gymnosperms are at
risk of extinction. The peril faced by other classes of organisms is
less thoroughly analysed, but fully 40 per cent of the examined species
of planet earth are in danger, including perhaps 51 per cent of
reptiles, 52 per cent of insects, and 73 per cent of flowering plants.

By the most conservative measure - based on the last century's recorded
extinctions - the current rate of extinction is 100 times the
background rate. But the eminent Harvard biologist Edward O Wilson, and
other scientists, estimate that the true rate is more like 1,000 to
10,000 times the background rate. The actual annual sum is only an
educated guess, because no scientist believes that the tally of life
ends at the 1.5 million species already discovered; estimates range as
high as 100 million species on earth, with 10 million as the median
guess. Bracketed between best- and worst-case scenarios, then,
somewhere between 2.7 and 270 species are erased from existence every
day. Including today.

We now understand that the majority of life on Earth has never been -
and will never be - known to us. In a staggering forecast, Wilson
predicts that our present course will lead to the extinction of half of
all plant and animal species by 2100.

You probably had no idea. Few do. A poll by the American Museum of
Natural History finds that seven in 10 biologists believe that mass
extinction poses a colossal threat to human existence, a more serious
environmental problem than even its contributor, global warming; and
that the dangers of mass extinction are woefully underestimated by
almost everyone outside science. In the 200 years since French
naturalist Georges Cuvier first floated the concept of extinction,
after examining fossil bones and concluding "the existence of a world
previous to ours, destroyed by some sort of catastrophe", we have only
slowly recognised and attempted to correct our own catastrophic
behaviour.

Some nations move more slowly than others. In 1992, an international
summit produced a treaty called the Convention on Biological Diversity
that was subsequently ratified by 190 nations - all except the unlikely
coalition of the United States, Iraq, the Vatican, Somalia, Andorra and
Brunei. The European Union later called on the world to arrest the
decline of species and ecosystems by 2010. Last year, worried
biodiversity experts called for the establishment of a scientific body
akin to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to provide a
united voice on the extinction crisis and urge governments to action.

Yet, despite these efforts, the Red List, updated every two years,
continues to show metastatic growth. There are a few heartening
examples of so-called Lazarus species lost and then found: the wollemi
pine and the mahogany glider in Australia, the Jerdon's courser in
India, the takahe in New Zealand, and, maybe, the ivory-billed
woodpecker in the United States. But for virtually all others, the Red
List is a dry country with little hope of rain, as species ratchet down
the listings from secure to vulnerable, to endangered, to critically
endangered, to extinct.

All these disappearing species are part of a fragile membrane of
organisms wrapped around the Earth so thinly, writes Wilson, that it
"cannot be seen edgewise from a space shuttle, yet so internally
complex that most species composing it remain undiscovered". We owe
everything to this membrane of life. Literally everything. The air we
breathe. The food we eat. The materials of our homes, clothes, books,
computers, medicines. Goods and services that we can't even imagine
we'll someday need will come from species we have yet to identify. The
proverbial cure for cancer. The genetic fountain of youth. Immortality.
Mortality. The living membrane we so recklessly destroy is existence
itself.

Biodiversity is defined as the sum of an area's genes (the building
blocks of inheritance), species (organisms that can interbreed), and
ecosystems (amalgamations of species in their geological and chemical
landscapes). The richer an area's biodiversity, the tougher its immune
system, since biodiversity includes not only the number of species but
also the number of individuals within that species, and all the
inherent genetic variations - life's only army against the diseases of
oblivion.

Yet it's a mistake to think that critical genetic pools exist only in
the gaudy show of the coral reefs, or the cacophony of the rainforest.
Although a hallmark of the desert is the sparseness of its garden, the
orderly progression of plants and the understated camouflage of its
animals, this is only an illusion. Turn the desert inside out and
upside down and you'll discover its true nature. Escaping drought and
heat, life goes underground in a tangled overexuberance of roots and
burrows reminiscent of a rainforest canopy, competing for moisture, not
light. Animal trails criss-cross this subterranean realm in private
burrows engineered, inhabited, stolen, shared and fought over by ants,
beetles, wasps, cicadas, tarantulas, spiders, lizards, snakes, mice,
squirrels, rats, foxes, tortoises, badgers and coyotes.

To survive the heat and drought, desert life pioneers ingenious
solutions. Coyotes dig and maintain wells in arroyos, probing deep for
water. White-winged doves use their bodies as canteens, drinking enough
when the opportunity arises to increase their bodyweight by more than
15 per cent. Black-tailed jack rabbits tolerate internal temperatures
of 111F. Western box turtles store water in their oversized bladders
and urinate on themselves to stay cool. Mesquite grows taproots more
than 160ft deep in search of moisture.

These life-forms and their life strategies compose what we might think
of as the "body" of the desert, with some species the lungs and others
the liver, the blood, the skin. The trend in scientific investigation
in recent decades has been toward understanding the interconnectedness
of the bodily components, i.e. the effect one species has on the
others. The loss of even one species irrevocably changes the desert (or
the tundra, rainforest, prairie, coastal estuary, coral reef, and so
on) as we know it, just as the loss of each human being changes his or
her family forever.

Nowhere is this better proven than in a 12-year study conducted in the
Chihuahuan desert by James H Brown and Edward Heske of the University
of New Mexico. When a kangaroo-rat guild composed of three closely
related species was removed, shrublands quickly converted to
grasslands, which supported fewer annual plants, which in turn
supported fewer birds. Even humble players mediate stability. So when
you and I hear of this year's extinction of the Yangtze river dolphin,
and think, "how sad", we're not calculating the deepest cost: that
extinctions lead to co-extinctions because most living things on Earth
support a few symbionts, while keystone species influence and support
myriad plants and animals. Army ants, for example, are known to support
100 known species, from beetles to birds. A European study finds steep
declines in honeybee diversity in the past 25 years but also
significant attendant declines in plants that depend on bees for
pollination - a job estimated to be worth #50bn worldwide. Meanwhile,
beekeepers in 24 American states report that perhaps 70 per cent of
their colonies have recently died off, threatening #7bn in US
agriculture. And bees are only a small part of the pollinator crisis.

One of the most alarming developments is the rapid decline not just of
species but of higher taxa, such as the class Amphibia, the
300-million-year-old group of frogs, salamanders, newts and toads hardy
enough to have preceded and then outlived most dinosaurs. Biologists
first noticed die-offs two decades ago, and, since then, have watched
as seemingly robust amphibian species vanished in as little as six
months. The causes cover the spectrum of human environmental assaults,
including rising ultraviolet radiation from a thinning ozone layer,
increases in pollutants and pesticides, habitat loss from agriculture
and urbanisation, invasions of exotic species, the wildlife trade,
light pollution, and fungal diseases. Sometimes stressors merge to form
an unwholesome synergy; an African frog brought to the West in the
1950s for use in human pregnancy tests likely introduced a fungus
deadly to native frogs. Meanwhile, a recent analysis in Nature
estimated that, in the past 20 years, at least 70 species of South
American frogs had gone extinct as a result of climate change.

In a 2004 analysis published in Science, Lian Pin Koh and his colleagues
predict that an initially modest co-extinction rate will climb
alarmingly as host extinctions rise in the near future. Graphed out,
the forecast mirrors the rising curve of an infectious disease, with
the human species acting all the parts: the pathogen, the vector, the
Typhoid Mary who refuses culpability, and, ultimately, one of up to 100
million victims.

"Rewilding" is bigger, broader, and bolder than humans have thought
before. Many conservation biologists believe it's our best hope for
arresting the sixth great extinction. Wilson calls it "mainstream
conservation writ large for future generations". This is because more
of what we've done until now - protecting pretty landscapes, attempts
at sustainable development, community-based conservation and ecosystem
management - will not preserve biodiversity through the critical next
century. By then, half of all species will be lost, by Wilson's
calculation.

To save Earth's living membrane, we must put its shattered pieces back
together. Only "megapreserves" modelled on a deep scientific
understanding of continent-wide ecosystem needs hold that promise.
"What I have been preparing to say is this," wrote Thoreau more than
150 years ago. "In wildness is the preservation of the world." This,
science finally understands.

The Wildlands Project, the conservation group spearheading the drive to
rewild North America - by reconnecting remaining wildernesses (parks,
refuges, national forests, and local land trust holdings) through
corridors - calls for reconnecting wild North America in four broad
"megalinkages": along the Rocky Mountain spine of the continent from
Alaska to Mexico; across the arctic/boreal from Alaska to Labrador;
along the Atlantic via the Appalachians; and along the Pacific via the
Sierra Nevada into the Baja peninsula. Within each megalinkage, core
protected areas would be connected by mosaics of public and private
lands providing safe passage for wildlife to travel freely. Broad,
vegetated overpasses would link wilderness areas split by roads.
Private landowners would be enticed to either donate land or adopt
policies of good stewardship along critical pathways.

It's a radical vision, one the Wildlands Project expects will take 100
years or more to complete, and one that has won the project a special
enmity from those who view environmentalists with suspicion. Yet the
core brainchild of the Wildlands Project - that true conservation must
happen on an ecosystem-wide scale - is now widely accepted. Many
conservation organisations are already collaborating on the project,
including international players such as Naturalia in Mexico, US
national heavyweights like Defenders of Wildlife, and regional experts
from the Southern Rockies Ecosystem Project to the Grand Canyon
Wildlands Council. Kim Vacariu, the South-west director of the US's
Wildlands Project, reports that ranchers are coming round, one town
meeting at a time, and that there is interest, if not yet support, from
the insurance industry and others who "face the reality of car-wildlife
collisions daily".

At its heart, rewilding is based on living with the monster under the
bed, since the big, scary animals that frightened us in childhood, and
still do, are the fierce guardians of biodiversity. Without wolves,
wolverines, grizzlies, black bears, mountain lions and jaguars, wild
populations shift toward the herbivores, who proceed to eat plants into
extinction, taking birds, bees, reptiles, amphibians and rodents with
them. A tenet of ecology states that the world is green because
carnivores eat herbivores. Yet the big carnivores continue to die out
because we fear and hunt them and because they need more room than we
preserve and connect. Male wolverines, for instance, can possess home
ranges of 600 sq m. Translated, Greater London would have room for only
one.

The first campaign out of the Wildlands Project's starting gate is the
"spine of the continent", along the mountains from Alaska to Mexico,
today fractured by roads, logging, oil and gas development, grazing,
ski resorts, motorised back-country recreation and sprawl.

The spine already contains dozens of core wildlands, including
wilderness areas, national parks, national monuments, wildlife refuges,
and private holdings. On the map, these scattered fragments look like
debris falls from meteorite strikes. Some are already partially
buffered by surrounding protected areas such as national forests. But
all need interconnecting linkages across public and private lands -
farms, ranches, suburbia - to facilitate the travels of big carnivores
and the net of biodiversity that they tow behind them.

The Wildlands Project has also identified the five most critically
endangered wildlife linkages along the spine, each associated with a
keystone species. Grizzlies already pinched at Crowsnest Pass on
Highway Three, between Alberta and British Columbia, will be entirely
cut off from the bigger gene pool to the north if a larger road is
built. Greater sage grouse, Canada lynx, black bears and jaguars face
their own lethal obstacles further south.

But by far the most endangered wildlife-linkage is the borderland
between the US and Mexico. The Sky Islands straddle this boundary, and
some of North America's most threatened wildlife - jaguars, bison,
Sonoran pronghorn, Mexican wolves - cross, or need to cross, here in
the course of their life's travels. Unfortunately for wildlife, Mexican
workers cross here too. Men, women, and children, running at night,
one-gallon water jugs in hand.

The problem for wildlife is not so much the intrusions of illegal
Mexican workers but the 700-mile border fence proposed to keep them
out. From an ecological perspective, it will sever the spine at the
lumbar, paralysing the lower continent.

Here, in a nutshell, is all that's wrong with our treatment of nature.
Amid all the moral, practical, and legal issues with the border fence,
the biological catastrophe has barely been noted. It's as if extinction
is not contagious and we won't catch it.

If, as some indigenous people believe, the jaguar was sent to the world
to test the will and integrity of human beings, then surely we need to
reassess. Border fences have terrible consequences. One between India
and Pakistan forces starving bears and leopards, which can no longer
traverse their feeding territories, to attack villagers.

The truth is that wilderness is more dangerous to us caged than free -
and has far more value to us wild than consumed. Wilson suggests the
time has come to rename the "environmentalist view" the "real-world
view", and to replace the gross national product with the more
comprehensive "genuine progress indicator", which estimates the true
environmental costs of farming, fishing, grazing, mining, smelting,
driving, flying, building, paving, computing, medicating and so on.
Until then, it's like keeping a ledger recording income but not
expenses. Like us, the Earth has a finite budget.

[Reprinted with permission from Mother Jones magazine. ) 2007,
Foundation for National Progress. The Fragile Edge: Diving and Other
Adventures in the South Pacific by Julia Whitty is published by
Houghton Mifflin on 7 May]

Disappearing World

More than 16,000 species of the world's mammals, birds, plants and other
organisms are at present officially regarded as threatened with
extinction to one degree or another, according to the Red List.

Maintained by the Swiss-based World Conservation Union (usually known
by the initials IUCN), the Red List is one of the gloomiest books in
the world, and is set to get even gloomier.

Since 1963 it has attempted to set out the conservation status of the
planet's wildlife, in a series of categories which now range from
Extinct (naturally), through Critically Endangered, Endangered,
Vulnerable and Near-Threatened, and finishing with Least Concern. The
numbers in the "threatened" categories are steadily rising.

Taxonomists at the IUCN regularly attempt to update the list, but that
is a massive job to undertake - there are about 5,000 mammal species in
the world and about 10,000 birds, but more than 300,000 types of plant,
and undoubtedly well over a million insect species, and perhaps many
more. Some species, such as beetles living in the rainforest canopy,
could become extinct before they are even known to science.

The last Red List update, released in May last year, looked at 40,168
species and considered 16,118 to be threatened - including 7,725
animals of all types (mammals, birds, reptiles, fish, insects etc) and
8,390 plants.




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