Why We
Have to Save Wildlife to Save Ourselves
Children
today see far fewer plants and animals than their parents did, and that is
making their future increasingly risky.
Midway
through the new special issue of Science about the global loss of wildlife, my
heart caught on this idea: We now live with a steady, imperceptible loss “in
people’s expectations of what the natural world around them should look like,”
and “each generation grows up within a slightly more impoverished natural
biodiversity.” It’s not just about elephants, rhinos, and other iconic species
disappearing. It’s about the decline of everything.
When
children go outdoors today (to the extent that they go outdoors at all) they
see 35 percent fewer individual butterflies and moths than their parents would
have seen 40 years ago, and 28 percent fewer individual vertebrates—birds,
mammals, amphibians, reptiles, and fish. It’s not quite a silent spring, just
one that is becoming quieter with each passing year, insidiously, so we hardly
notice. The Science authors dub this phenomenon “defaunation.” I prefer to
think of it as “the great vanishing,” but either way it’s bad news.
Why don’t
we do something about it? Wildlife conservation suffers under the misguided
notion that it is a boutique issue. “Animals do matter to people,” says one
article in the Science special issue, “but on balance, they matter less than
food, jobs, energy, money, and development. As long as we continue to view
animals in ecosystems as irrelevant to these basic demands, animals will lose.”
That need
not be as hopeless as it sounds, because the authors go on to remind us in
alarming detail just how utterly our economic and political well-being depends
on keeping wildlife populations healthy. Insect pollinator populations, for
instance, are in free fall. But they are essential for 75 percent of the
world’s food crops. Somewhat less obviously, native predators—mainly insects,
birds, and bats—also provide natural pest control, worth an estimated $4.5
billion annually in the United States. Half our pharmaceuticals come from the
natural world, many of them from wildlife. The fer-de-lance snake, for
instance, gave us ACE inhibitors, our most effective medicine for heart
disease. A deadly cone snail gave us a painkiller called Prialt that’s more
potent than morphine yet not addictive.
Much more
directly, a billion of the world’s poorest people depend on wildlife as their
main source of animal protein, and 2.6 billion rely on seafood protein. Failure
to manage these resources so they will be available next year and the year
after is a recipe for starvation, civil unrest, terrorism, and the collapse of
economies, if not of civilization itself.
We may
roll our eyes about ethical shoppers armed with their Monterey Bay Aquarium
sustainable seafood guidelines. But illegal and unmanaged fisheries are
anything but a niche issue. On the contrary, when a weak government allowed
foreign vessels to decimate the fisheries on the coast of Somalia, it turned
former fishermen into pirates. That scenario is now being replayed in the West
African nations of Benin, Senegal, and Nigeria. In Thailand, failure to manage
the fisheries now forces boats to “travel farther, endure harsher conditions,
search deeper, and fish for longer to obtain the types of harvests more readily
available a generation ago,” according to the Science writers. Men—and
children—who are essentially slaves “may remain at sea for several years
without pay, forced to work 18- or 20-hour days. Starvation, physical abuse,
and murder are common on these vessels.”
The
Science authors outline some of the steps we can take to stop or even reverse
this catastrophic pattern of decline. They say President Obama’s interagency
task force on wildlife trafficking and the European and Asian “war on poachers”
aren’t enough. That approach takes on crime and terrorism funded by wildlife
trafficking, but it misses the basic conservation ecology. Among better
solutions, the Science authors say, we should advocate giving fishermen and
hunters exclusive rights to harvest grounds, so they will become invested in
protecting long-term productivity. That’s worked with fisheries in Fiji and
with community conservancies covering almost half the land area in the
southeast African nation of Namibia.
The
authors also propose more radical forms of species translocations.
Conservationists in Australia and Asia have introduced populations of the
kakapo, or owl parrot, to remote islands, to protect them from introduced
mammalian predators on the mainland. Likewise, a population of disease-free
Tasmanian devils is living outside its native range. In some cases where
important species have gone extinct, it may help to introduce a substitute
species that performs a similar ecological function. Aldabra giant tortoises,
for instance, have now replaced an extinct Mauritian tortoise to restore
grazing functions and seed dispersal of native large-seeded plants on that
island.
Finally,
the authors argue for “a new model of coexistence between predators and humans
over large spatial scales,” and they cite as a model the recovery, in densely
populated Europe, of golden jackals, gray wolves, Eurasian lynx, Iberian lynx,
and wolverines.
One hitch
may be that we don’t know which species we depend on, and we may not even
recognize when some nematode, or beetle, or bat that is functionally more
important than, say, the rhino, is disappearing.
Reading
this special issue, I keep thinking of prochlorococcus, an ocean microbe, which
wasn’t even discovered by scientists until the 1980s. It produces 20 percent of
the oxygen we breathe—one of every five breaths. That suggests why the authors
believe that “the cryptic nature of defaunation has strong potential to soon
become very non-cryptic, rivaling the impact of many other forms of global
change”—think earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis, even meteorites
crashing down from space—“in terms of loss of ecosystem services essential for
human well-being.”
In other
words, it’s not just about saving wildlife. It’s about saving our world. It’s
about saving ourselves.
Note :
Shared from Takepart.com
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