UK Indymedia
Skip to content or view mobile version

Home | Mobile | Editorial | Mission | Privacy | About | Contact | Help | Security | Support

A network of individuals, independent and alternative media activists and organisations, offering grassroots, non-corporate, non-commercial coverage of important social and political issues.

Skip Nav | Home | Mobile | Editorial Guidelines | Mission Statement | About Us | Contact | Help | Security | Support Us

The End Of The World?

Sheff-man | 02.10.2003 11:05 | Ecology

disturbing article about the likely extinction of important species and the massive increase in world population.

disturbing article about the likely extinction of important species and the massive increase in world population.


Goodbye cruel world

Lion numbers have dropped by 90% in 20 years. The other big cats are going fast. How long before all the Earth's 'mega species' disappear from the wild? By Tim Radford

Thursday October 2, 2003
The Guardian

Collectively, the householders of the world could be about to put the cat out. African lion numbers have fallen by 90% in the past 20 years, according to a recent report. There are only about 23,000 alive today. That's the number of seats at Barnsley football club stadium.
The tiger is also an endangered species. At the highest estimate, there are fewer than 8,000 left. To put that number in perspective, about that many people work on Ministry of Defence sites in Wales. There are probably only 15,000 or so cheetahs in the whole of Africa. The Iberian lynx is down to about 600.

And it's not just the cats that we're putting out. The Cross River gorilla sub species, for example, which lives on the border between Nigeria and Cameroon, is down to about 200 at the most. That is fewer than the number of British men who each year develop breast cancer. There are fewer than 50 Chinese alligators surviving in China. Most books give a estimate for sperm whales of 1 to 2 million, but a paper published last year gave an estimate of 360,000. The most recent estimate for southern hemisphere minke whales is about half the total estimate of 760,000 derived from surveys in the late 1980s.

Lions, cheetahs and lynxes share certain characteristics with many other threatened creatures: they are large, they are carnivores, they are fussy about where they live, they need a large range, they have small litters and a long gestation period, and they are hunted.

This makes them natural candidates for extinction in a world in which human numbers have soared from 2.5 billion to more than 6 billion in 50 years. The planet's population grows by more than 80 million every year. There are roughly 240,000 extra mouths to feed every day.

Each of these humans has a personal ecological footprint: that is, each appropriates an average of 2.1 hectares (5.2 acres) to provide water, food, energy, housing, transport, commerce and somewhere to tip the waste. (Americans on average take up almost 10 hectares each.) Even though the rate of growth in human numbers is beginning to decline, the wild things are being pushed towards oblivion at an ever faster rate. That is because the numbers of individual households - empty nesters, yuppies, singletons and one-parent families - is exploding, even in those countries with low population growth. That means yet more pressure on the wild to provide timber, gravel and lime, plant fibres, food and water.

Survivors in an increasingly human world need a different set of characteristics. They must be small herbivores that produce large numbers of offspring very swiftly, adapt happily to concrete, tarmac and fossil-fuel pollution and are prepared to live anywhere. So the typical wild animals of the 21st century, as one American biol ogist predicted more than 30 years ago, "will be the house sparrow, the grey squirrel, the Virginia opossum and the Norway rat". The lion, denied the lion's share, could slope off into the eternal night.

The big animals are merely the most visible of endangered species. One eighth of all bird species are at serious risk of extinction. At least 13% of the world's flowering plants could be about to perish. One-fourth of all mammals are to some extent endangered and around 30 species are down to their last thousand members. There are 19 critically endangered primates, and 16 species of albatross could be about to fly away for ever. These are sober estimates from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature about animals that are already well studied. But biologists simply do not know how many species there are on the planet. The big ones are easy to spot, the smaller ones are literally beyond counting. About 1.8 million little birds, beasts and beetles have been named, but there could be seven million or even 70 million.

Five years ago, John Lawton, a population biologist and now the chief of Britain's Natural Environment Research Council, tried to take the measure of biodiversity in the Cameroon. He and colleagues marked out a few plots of forest and started trying to count the species in eight taxonomic groups. They spent 10,000 hours on the research and then abandoned it: the job would have kept 1,200 taxonomists busy for years.

"We surveyed birds, butterflies, ants and then all the way down to itsy-bitsy nematode worms," he says. "The percentage of species we found that were actually known and described by taxonomists was inversely related to their body size. In other words, we didn't discover any new birds. We found a new subspecies of butterfly. And 90% of all the nematode worms had never been seen by a scientist before. It was just a huge effort: the number of scientist days it took to identify the things was again inversely related to their body size, the smaller the critters were the longer and longer and longer it took to sort them out."

The Earth's most heart-rending problem comes with a catch-all title, biodiversity. These six clumsy syllables sum up the totality of life on Earth, from subterranean fungi to wind-borne spores, from cloud-forest beetles to Arctic bears, from ocean algae to tubeworms in the abyss. Many of these creatures quietly underwrite human economic growth: they oxygenate the atmosphere, cleanse drinking water, fix nitrogen, recycle waste and pollinate crops. A team at the University of Maryland once calculated that nature delivered goods and services worth $33 trillion to the global economy every year. The gross national product of the whole world at the time was only about $18 trillion.

One school of thought argues that if the big, beautiful beasts - the charismatic megavertebrates - are going, then thousands of small, nondescript creatures could go with them, with unpredictable consequences. There are almost apocalyptic predictions about rates of extinction. Edward O Wilson, one of America's most distinguished biologists, once calculated that 27,000 species of creature went extinct every year in the tropical forests alone. A few years later, a team of biologists at Stanford University suggested that populations of plants and animals were being wiped out at the rate of 1,800 an hour. These may be wild overestimates, but even the most conservative biologists tell a bleak story: this, they say, is the sixth great extinction of life in the history of the planet. The first five extinctions, recorded in the ancient rocks, were all natural: from volcanic catastrophe, climate change, asteroid impact, or even deadly radiation from an exploding star. But this one, they all agree, is the unwitting work of humankind.

Robert May - Lord May of Oxford, president of the Royal Society, a former government chief scientific adviser and once a research partner of Edward O Wilson - reckons that at the very least, the rate of extinction is now 1,000 times faster than the "background" rate of extinction over hundreds of millions of years, recorded in fossils from Cretaceous, Jurassic and Triassic rocks. Should people care? Most conservation action by bodies such as the WWF concentrates entirely on the charismatic big vertebrates, such as the panda and tiger, rhino and lion. Could we live without them? "Maybe we can, but if people aren't going to care about them disappearing, who is going to give a stuff about the insects and fungi until the consequences emerge?" May says. "A stronger argument is that we are not sure how much we can simplify the world and still have it deliver all the services we depend on."

Lions won't be extinguished, he says. "They will be kept in reserves and zoos. But the question is, whether you are keeping a lion or whether you are keeping a Latin binomial, Felis leo, and that is a question that is awkward to ask."

The lion, according to Georgina Mace, director of science at the Zoological Society of London, was the one animal conservationists had not been worried about. Until recently, it had been widespread in Africa, though it had all but disappeared from Asia. There are two ways of alarming conservationists, she says. "One is that you are incredibly rare and you just sit on a remote island, being a species that is found nowhere else and there are just 50 of you, but you could have been rare for ever and ever: that is the nature of the life you have. The other way of being of conservation concern is to decline very quickly, and we have been much better at spotting the former rather than the latter. But the latter is probably the one that is going to affect most species. If you are just sitting there being very rare, people are usually protecting you."

The lion, as she sees it, is not an isolated case. The population of bluefin tuna had crashed by 95% before anybody noticed. The passenger pigeon once existed in tens of millions, but was wiped out. The American buffalo almost disappeared. There would once have been lions by the million.

"Carnivore numbers fluctuate. If you are looking in one place, you'd see them come and go. Actually, what they are doing is moving large scale across the landscape, occupying areas where there is abundant prey and then moving somewhere else; they are quite hard to monitor. You think, oh, they are rare here - and then you suddenly realise that actually, they are rare everywhere."

The bitterest irony is that animal populations are dwindling and extinctions accelerating despite a 30-year campaign to establish parks and wildlife reserves in all the great wilderness areas of the world: the rainforests, savannahs, estuaries, deserts, mountains, grasslands, wetlands and so on. These wildernesses cover 46% of the land surface, but hold just 2.4% of the population. More than 10% of these places are now protected by national and international edict. Yet ultimately they cannot protect the wild things. Poachers look to make a killing in both senses of the word. Big animals stray and become a menace to small farmers, who drive them off or kill them. And the tourists turn up, bringing even more of mankind and its expensive ways into the wilderness. A study of the Wolong Reserve in China - opened decades ago to protect the giant panda - revealed that the panda was still in decline and that more humans had moved in, cutting back the bamboo forest for roads, homes and tourist services. The lions in Africa - and all the creatures in Africa's national parks - are still being hunted, hounded or harassed by humans.

There are some who argue that some species will only be saved in zoos (indeed, London Zoo played a big part in saving the almost-extinct Arabian oryx and restoring it to its native wild). But Mark Collins of the UN world conservation monitoring centre in Cambridge says he cannot accept the idea that the lion might survive only in safari parks, or that zoos could be the last resort as the saviours of species. The big wilderness reserves exist, and they could be made to work.

"I feel we have sufficient knowledge of how to manage these key habitats. It is just a matter of political will," he says. "I do not accept that the doors are closed. We have parks, and even outside parks, we have the technology and the knowledge to manage most of these habitats like forests and so on, properly. It's just that we are not actually doing it."

L ife's richest places are also those where humans are poorest. Africans are already struggling against hunger, poverty, Aids, malaria, cattle diseases and - in many cases - civil war. Nobody knows how this one is going to end. "It is all very well for you and me, but if I was some poor, oppressed farmer in Africa I am not so sure I would look kindly on the elephants that trample my crops," says May. Nor have Europeans and Americans held up much of an example. When western governments began pressing African and Asian nations about the fate of the elephant, developing nations retali ated by suggesting that the Atlantic cod, too, should be protected. The point is well made. Developed nations with sophisticated fishing technology have knowingly put cod and tuna at risk, and had begun to wipe out the barn door skate and great white shark as their nets swept through the seas. "There is a real irony," says Mace.

The lions of Africa - and the wild creatures further down the food chain - can only be saved by money and political will from both national and international communities. The developing nations do have an incentive to protect their biodiversity. It represents potential wealth, one way or the other. Some extinctions of already rare creatures are inevitable. But spend on the lions, says Lawton, and you could save a lot more besides. Committed spending saved the black and white rhino - targets of poachers as well as victims of human pressure - but the sums of money invested were critical.

"If you create big, effective reserves for these charismatic guys at the top of the food chain, huge numbers of other creatures we don't even know exist could just slip through to the end of the century on the coat-tails of the lions," Lawton says. "So it is a matter of putting enough resources in. In a world which is prepared to spend an extra £55bn on a war in Iraq, we are talking about peanuts."




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Printable version | Send it to a friend | Save story























Sheff-man

Download this article in pdf format>>

Email this article to someone>>

Make a quick comment on this article>>

Comments

Display the following comment

  1. Legalize it. — Spliffy

Kollektives

Birmingham
Cambridge
Liverpool
London
Oxford
Sheffield
South Coast
Wales
World

Other UK IMCs
Bristol/South West
London
Northern Indymedia
Scotland

Server Appeal Radio Page Video Page Indymedia Cinema Offline Newsheet

Topics

Afghanistan
Analysis
Animal Liberation
Anti-Nuclear
Anti-militarism
Anti-racism
Bio-technology
Climate Chaos
Culture
Ecology
Education
Energy Crisis
Fracking
Free Spaces
Gender
Globalisation
Health
History
Indymedia
Iraq
Migration
Ocean Defence
Other Press
Palestine
Policing
Public sector cuts
Repression
Social Struggles
Technology
Terror War
Workers' Movements
Zapatista

2016 Reports

2015 Reports

2014 Reports

NATO 2014
News about resistance to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) summit to be held in Newport, Wales in September 2014

2013 Reports

G8 2013
Protests against the meeting of the G8 in the UK in 2013

2012 Reports

Workfare
Protests and campaigns against the governments compulsory labour scheme.

2011 Reports

2011 Census Resistance
Resistance to the UK Governments 2011 Census
August Riots
Reports and analysis of the summer 2011 urban riots which erupted after the Police murder of Mark Duggan.
Dale Farm
Resistance to the threatened eviction of Dale Farm.
J30 Strike
Reports related to the public sector strike on June 30th 2011
Occupy Everywhere
Reports from the wave of occupations that has spread across the USA and now the world inspired by Occupy Wall Street.

2010 Reports

Flotilla to Gaza
Protests against the murderous Israeli attack on the Gaza freedom flotilla.
Mayday 2010
International Workers Day - demonstrations, actions and protests held around 1st May 2010.
Tar Sands
Protests against the exploitation of the Alberta Tar Sands in Canada, see http://www.no-tar-sands.org/

2009 Reports

COP15 Climate Summit 2009
Reports, protests and announcements about the COP15 Climate Summit 2009 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
G20 London Summit
Protests against the G20 Summit in London: A meeting for the world's leaders to discuss the economy, its markets and the global financial crisis.
Guantánamo
Actions and campaigns to get the Guantánamo Bay prison camp shut down.
Indymedia Server Seizure
Coverage of the Police seizure of strummer.indymedia.org.uk - a UK Indymedia server which was colocated in Manchester.
University Occupations for Gaza
Reports and analysis of the wave of university occupations in solidarity with Gaza

2008 Reports

2008 Days Of Action For Autonomous Spaces
A week-end of initiatives and actions in defense of squats and autonomous spaces throughout the world. See: april2008.squat.net for more info.
Campaign against Carmel-Agrexco
Reports on the Campaign against Carmel-Agrexco, the Israeli state agricultural company. One of the key companies profiting from Israeli apartheid
Climate Camp 2008
The climate camp to be held near Kingsnorth early August 2008 - see www.climatecamp.org.uk
G8 Japan 2008
Protests against the G8 Summit in Lake Toya, Hokkaido, Japan, July 2008.
SHAC
Reports and announcements about the campaign to shut down vivisectionists Huntingdon Life Sciences
Smash EDO
Reports on the Brighton-based campaign against weapon manufacturer EDO MBM.
Stop Sequani Animal Testing
Reports and announcements about the campaign to shut down vivisectionists Sequani Ltd - www.sequani.wordpress.com
Stop the BNP's Red White and Blue festival
News, reports and announcements about the campaign against the BNP's Red White and Blue "festival"

2007 Reports

Climate Camp 2007
The climate camp to be held near Heathrow mid August 2007 - see www.climatecamp.org.uk
DSEi 2007
Protests and actions against DSEi, the world's largest arms fair which is held every two years in London. See http://www.dsei.org
G8 Germany 2007
Protests against the G8 Summit in Rostock, Germany, June 2007.
Mayday 2007
International Workers Day - demonstrations, actions and protests held on 1st May 2007.
No Border Camp 2007
The first No Border Camp in the UK to be held on 19-24 Sep 2007 to oppose a new planned immigration prison at Gatwick. See http://www.noborders.org.uk

2006 Reports

April 2006 No Borders Days of Action
International No Borders demonstrations including the UK ones at Harmondsworth Detention Centre near Heathrow Airport, Manchester and Glasgow, April 2006.
Art and Activism Caravan 2006
News from the border crossing project travelling from Greece (early June) via Macedonia, Albania, Montenegro, Serbia, Bosnia Herzegovina and Hungary to the eco-activist gathering Ecotopia in Slovakia. Supporting and connecting local youth groups, their actions and campaigns with the power of creative activism, the Caravan will share skills in the field of media, music, theatre, and street performance.
Climate Camp 2006
The climate camp to be held in northern England at the end of August 2006 - see www.climatecamp.org.uk
Faslane
reports on actions against the Faslane nuclear base in Scotland
French CPE uprising 2006
Mobilisations against the introduction of the CPE labour laws in France 2006.
G8 Russia 2006
Responses to the G8 in Russia, the official summit to be held on 15-17th July in St. Petersburg.
Lebanon War 2006
Reports on the Israeli aggression on Lebanon and protests against it.
March 18 Anti War Protest
Day of global action against occupation of Iraq held on 18th March 2006.
Mayday 2006
International Workers Day - demonstrations, actions and protests held on 1st May 2006.
Oaxaca Uprising
Reports related to the popular uprising in Oaxaca, Mexico and associated solidarity actions around the world.
Refugee Week 2006
Reports on events and actions during the 2006 Refugee Week, 19-25 June.
Rossport Solidarity
Reporting on the ongoing struggle in Mayo, Ireland against a pipeline build by oil giant Shell
SOCPA
News and reports on actions and repression related to the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005 and the Parliamentary 'exclusion zone' in central London.
Transnational Day of Action Against Migration Controls
Reports on actions and events on and around the Transnational Day of Action Against Migration Controls, 7 Oct 2006.
WSF 2006
The World Social Forum, January 2006, was held in 3 locations, Bamako (Mali), Caracas (Venezuela) and Karachi (Pakistan).

2005 Reports

DSEi 2005
September 2005: International arms trade fair London.
G8 2005
The UK has the Presidency of the G8 for 2005 - news and analysis relating to responses to the G8 and the meetings in London, Derbyshire, Sheffield and across the UK in the run up to the summit in July at Gleneagles in Scotland.
WTO Hong Kong 2005
Protests against the World Trade Organisation meeting in Hong Kong held from 13th to 18th of December 2005.

2004 Reports

European Social Forum
2004: ESF organizing, events and analysis.
FBI Server Seizure
07 September 2004: The FBI seized the hard drives from two Indymedia servers in London, Ahimsa I and II.
May Day 2004
May 2004: May Day.
Venezuela
August 2004: Chávez Referendum Venezuela.

2003 Reports

Bush 2003
November 2003: Coverage of the visit of US President Bush to London.
DSEi 2003
September 2003: International arms trade fair London.
Evian G8
May 2003: Evian G8 Summit.
May Day 2003
Mayday news from 2003.
No War F15
15 February 2003: No War on Iraq demos.
Saloniki Prisoner Support
2003: Saloniki (Greece) Prisoner Support page of IMC-UK. Hunger strike by those held after EU Summit.
Thessaloniki EU
June 2003: EU Summit Thessaloniki.
WSIS 2003
December 2003: UN's World Summit on the Information Society held in Geneva.

2002 Reports

Argentina
December 2002: Argentina, D19–21 one year on.
Barcelona EU
March 2002: EU Summit Barcelona.
Copenhagen EU
December 2002: EU Summit Copenhagen.
Earth Summit
August 2002: Earth Summit (Rio+10) South Africa.
May Day 2002
May 2002: May Day.
No War Day of Action
31 October 2002: No War Day of Action.
NoBorder Camp
July 2002: NoBorder Camp Strasbourg.
Prague NATO
November 2002: [Anti-]NATO Summit Prague.
Seville EU
June 2002: EU Summit Seville.
WEF/NATO/WSF
January/February 2002: WEF New York, NATO Summit Munich, WSF Porto Allegre.

2001 Reports

Barcelona WB
25 July 2001: Barcelona after World Bank conference no show
Border Camps
July 2001: NoBorder Caravan Genoa.
Brussels
December 2001: EU Summit Brussels.
Fiesta for Life
September 2001: Anti-DSEi.
Genoa
July 2001: G8 Genoa.
Göteborg
June 2001: European Council Göteborg.
May Day 2001
May 2001: May Day.
Peace not War
2001: Post-September 11 articles.
Salzburg
July 2001: European Economic Summit Salzburg.
WTO Qatar
November 2001: WTO Qatar.

2000 Reports

Prague/IMF/WB
26 September 2000: World Bank/IMF Meeting Prague.

IMCs


www.indymedia.org

Projects
print
radio
satellite tv
video

Africa

Europe
antwerpen
armenia
athens
austria
barcelona
belarus
belgium
belgrade
brussels
bulgaria
calabria
croatia
cyprus
emilia-romagna
estrecho / madiaq
galiza
germany
grenoble
hungary
ireland
istanbul
italy
la plana
liege
liguria
lille
linksunten
lombardia
madrid
malta
marseille
nantes
napoli
netherlands
northern england
nottingham imc
paris/île-de-france
patras
piemonte
poland
portugal
roma
romania
russia
sardegna
scotland
sverige
switzerland
torun
toscana
ukraine
united kingdom
valencia

Latin America
argentina
bolivia
chiapas
chile
chile sur
cmi brasil
cmi sucre
colombia
ecuador
mexico
peru
puerto rico
qollasuyu
rosario
santiago
tijuana
uruguay
valparaiso
venezuela

Oceania
aotearoa
brisbane
burma
darwin
jakarta
manila
melbourne
perth
qc
sydney

South Asia
india


United States
arizona
arkansas
asheville
atlanta
Austin
binghamton
boston
buffalo
chicago
cleveland
colorado
columbus
dc
hawaii
houston
hudson mohawk
kansas city
la
madison
maine
miami
michigan
milwaukee
minneapolis/st. paul
new hampshire
new jersey
new mexico
new orleans
north carolina
north texas
nyc
oklahoma
philadelphia
pittsburgh
portland
richmond
rochester
rogue valley
saint louis
san diego
san francisco
san francisco bay area
santa barbara
santa cruz, ca
sarasota
seattle
tampa bay
united states
urbana-champaign
vermont
western mass
worcester

West Asia
Armenia
Beirut
Israel
Palestine

Topics
biotech

Process
fbi/legal updates
mailing lists
process & imc docs
tech

Publish your news