Fresh water: There is no physical substance humans
require more than freshwater: without water we can only survive a few hellish
days. While pollution and overuse has threatened many of the world’s drinking
water sources, nature has an old-fashioned solution, at least, to pollution.
Healthy freshwater ecosystems—watersheds, wetlands, and forests—naturally clean
pollution and toxins from water. Soils, microorganisms, and plant roots all
play a role in filtering and recycling out pollutants with a price far cheaper
than building a water filtration plant. According to research, the more
biodiverse the ecosystem, the faster and more efficiently water is purified.
Pollination: Imagine trying to pollinate every apple
blossom in an orchard: this is what nature does for us. Insects, birds, and
even some mammals, pollinate the world’s plants, including much of human
agriculture. Around 80% of the world’s plants require a different species to
act as pollinator.
In agriculture,
pollinators are required for everything from tomatoes to cocoa, and almonds to
buckwheat, among hundreds of other crops. Globally, agricultural pollination
has been estimated to be worth around $216 billion a year. However large such
monetary estimates don’t include pollination for crops consumed by livestock,
biofuels, ornamental flowers, or the massive importance of wild plant
pollination.
Seed dispersal: Much like pollination, many of the
world’s plants require other species to move their seeds from the parent plant
to new sprouting ground. Seeds are dispersed by an incredibly wide-variety of
players: birds, bats, rodents, megafauna like elephants and tapir, and even,
researchers have recently discovered, fish. Seed dispersal is especially
important for tropical forests where a majority of plants depend on animals to
move.
Pest control: A recent study found that bats save US
agriculture billions of dollars a year simply by doing what they do naturally:
eating insects, many of which are potentially harmful to US crops.
Almost all
agricultural pests have natural enemies, along with bats, these include birds,
spiders, parasitic wasps and flies, fungi, and viral diseases. The loss, or
even decline, of such pest-eating predators can have massive impacts on
agriculture and ecosystems.
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Soil health: The ground under our feet matters more than we
often admit. Healthy fertile soil provides optimal homes for plants, while
participating in a number of natural cycles: from recycling nutrients to
purifying water. Although soil is renewable, it is also sensitive to overuse
and degradation often due to industrial agriculture, pollution, and
fertilizers. Natural vegetation and quality soil also mitigates excessive
erosion, which can have dramatic impacts from loss of agricultural land to
coastlines simply disappearing into the sea.
Medicine: Nature is our greatest medicine cabinet:
to date it has provided humankind with a multitude of life-saving medicines
from quinine to aspirin, and from morphine to numerous cancer and HIV-fighting
drugs. There is no question that additionally important medications—perhaps
even miracle cures—lie untapped in the world’s ecosystems. In fact, researchers
estimate that less than 1% of the world’s known species have been fully
examined for their medicinal value. However the ecosystems that have yielded
some of the world’s most important and promising drugs—such as rainforests,
peat swamps, and coral reefs—are also among the most endangered. Preserving
ecosystems and species today may benefit, or even save, millions of lives
tomorrow.
Fisheries: Humankind has turned to the rivers and
seas for food for at least 40,000 years but probably even longer. Today, amid
concern of a global fishery collapse, more than a billion people depend on fish
as their primary source of protein, many of them among the global poor. Fisheries
also provide livelihoods, both directly and indirectly, for around half a
billion. Coral reefs, mangroves, and seagrass ecosystems provide nurseries for
the world’s fisheries, while the open ocean is used for migrating routes and
hunting.
Even with the direct
importance of the world’s fisheries for food, stewardship has been lacking,
allowing many populations to drop precipitously and still permitting
ecologically destructive fishing. While the world’s fisheries are primarily
threatened by overfishing, including bycatch, marine pollution is also a major
problem.
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Biodiversity and wildlife
abundance: The argument to
save the world’s wildlife has often come from an aesthetic point of view. Many
conservationists have fought to save species simply because they like a particular species. This is often why more
popularly known animals—tigers, elephants, rhinos—receive far more attention
than less popular (although just as endangered) wildlife—for example, the
redbelly egg frog, the smokey bat, or the bastard quiver tree. But beyond
making the world a less lonely, less boring, and less beautiful place—admirable
reasons in themselves—many of the services provided by biodiversity are similar
to those provided by all of nature. Biodiversity produces food, fibers, wood
products; it cleans water, controls agricultural pests, pollinates and
dispersers the world plants; and provides recreation, such as birdwatching,
gardening, diving, and ecotourism.
In the discussion of
biodiversity, however, bioabundance is often ignored. A loss in bioabundance
means that species are not just important for their diversity, but for their
numbers. While Asian elephants may not go extinct any time soon, their
depletion in forests means that the ecosystems lose the elephants’ special
ecological talents such as spreading seeds and engineering micro-habitats. The
drop in salmon populations in the US has caused the entire freshwater ecosystem
to receive less nutrients every year (researchers estimate a nutrient-drop of
over 90 percent); this means less food for people, less salmon for predators,
and a less rich river overall. Declining nutrients also makes it impossible for
the salmon to rebound to optimal populations, creating a vicious circle of
bio-decline.
Climate regulation: The natural world helps regulate the
Earth’s climate. Ecosystems such as rainforests, peatlands, and mangroves store
significant amounts of carbon, while the ocean captures massive amounts of
carbon through phytoplankton. While regulating greenhouse gases are imperative
in the age of climate change, new research is showing that the world’s
ecosystems may also play a role in weather. A recent study found that the
Amazon rainforest acted as its own ‘bioreactor’, producing clouds and
precipitation through the abundance of plant materials in the forest.
Economy: In the common tension viewed between the
economy and the environment—e.g. do we clear-cut a forest or conserve it?—one
fact is often neglected: the environment underpins the entire global economy.
Without fertile soils, clean drinking water, healthy forests, and a stable
climate, the world’s economy would face disaster. By imperiling our
environment, we imperil the economy. According to research published in Science, the global worth of total ecosystem services
could run between $40-60 trillion a year.
Health: Recent research has found what
nature-lovers have long expected: spending time in a green space, such as a
park, provides benefits for one’s mental and physical health. Exercising in a
park, instead of inside a gym, has shown to provide mental health benefits as a
greater sense of well-being. Walking for 20 minutes in a green space has been
proven to help children with ADHD improve their concentration, even working as
well, or better, than medication. People who live in more natural settings have
better overall health, even when research has taken into account economic
differences.
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Art: Imagine poetry without flowers, painting
without landscapes, or film without scenery. Imagine if Shakespeare had no rose
to compare Juliet to, or if William Blake had no Tyger to set alight. Imagine
if Van Gogh lacked crows to paint or Durer a rhinoceros to cut. What would
the Jungle Book be without Baloo or the Wind in the Willows without Mr. Badger?
Imagine My Antonia without the red grass of the American
prairie or Wuthering Heights without the
bleak moors. How would The Lord of the Rings film
series appear without the stunning mountain ranges of New Zealand, or Lawrence of Arabia without the desert of North
Africa? There is no question that the natural world has provided global arts
with some of its greatest subjects. What we lose in nature, we also lose in
art.
Spiritual: While some of what nature provides us is
measurable, most of what nature gives us is simply beyond measure. Economic
measurements are useful; but as with most of what happens in the world,
economics is simply incapable of capturing true worth. Science is also a useful
measurement regarding the importance of nature, but once again cannot measure
what nature means—practically and aesthetically—to each individual.
Perhaps the most
difficult gift of nature’s to measure is its ingrained connection to human spirituality.
In most of the world’s religions the natural world is rightly revered. In
Christianity, Earthly paradise existed in a garden, while Noah, the original
conservationist, is commanded by God to save every species. Buddhists believe
all life—from the smallest fly to the blue whale—is sacred and worthy of
compassion. For Hindus every bit of the natural world is infused with divinity.
Muslims believe the natural world was created by Allah and only given to humans
as gift to be held in trust. Indigenous cultures worldwide celebrate the
natural world as their ‘mother’.
But one need not be
religious to understand the importance of nature to the human spirit: one only
need spend time alone in a shadowy forest, sit on a forgotten beach, touch the
spine of a living frog, or watch the quarter moon swing behind mountain
silhouettes.
Note:Shared
from news.mongabay.com
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