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The New Age of Extinction.
Novembre del 2009
   
Bryan Walsh / Madagascar, TIME, April 13,
2009.
   
As the globe warms, more than the climate is
endagered. Species are vanishing at a scary rate.
We’re the cause –but we’re also the solution.

There are at least 8 million unique species of life on
the planet, if not far more, and you could be
forgiven for believing that all of them can be found
in Andasibe. Walking through this rain forest in
Madagascar is like stepping into the library of life.
Sunlight seeps through the silky fringes of the
Ravenea louvelii, an endangered palm found, like so
much else on this African island, nowhere else. Leaf-
tailed geckos cling to the trees, cloaked in green. A
fat Parson’s chamaleon lies lazily on a branch, beady
eyes scanning for dinner. But the animal I most
hoped to find, I don’t see at first; I hear it, though –
a sustained groan that electrifies the forest quiet. My
Malagasy guide, Marie Razafindrasolo, finds the
source of the sound perched on a branch. It is the
black-and-white indri, largest of the lemurs –a type
of small primate found only in Madagascar. The cry
is known as a spacing call, a warning to other indris
to keep their distance, to prevent competition for
food. But there’s not much risk of interlopers. The
species –like many other lemurs, like many other
animals in Madagascar, like much of life on Earth –is
endangered and dwingling fast.

Madagascar –which separated from India 80 million
to 100 million years ago before eventually settling
off the south-eastern coast of Africa- is in many
ways an Earth apart. All that time in geographic
isolation made Madagascar a Darwinian playground,
its animals and plants evolving into forms utterly
original. They include species as stange-looking as
the pygmy mouse lemur –a chirping, palm-size
mammal that may be the smallest primate on the
planet- and as haunting as the carnivorous fossa, a
catlike animal about 75 cm long. Some 90% of the
island’s plants and about 70% of its animals are
endemic, meaning that they are found only in
Madagascar. But what makes life on the island
unique also makes it uniquely vulnerable. “If we lose
these animals on Madagascar, trey’re gone forever”,
says Russell Mittermeier, president of the wildlife
group Conservation International (CI).

That loss seems likelier than ever because the
animals are under threat as never before. Once
lushly forested, Madagascar has seen more than
80% of its original vegetation cut down or burned
since humans arrived at least 1,500 years ago,
fragmenting habitats and leaving animals effectively
homeless. Unchecked hunting wiped out a number of
large species, and today mining, logging and energy
exploration threaten those that remain. “You have
an area the size of New Jersey in Madagascar that is
still under forest, and all this incredible diversity is
crammed into it”, says Mittermeier, an American
who has been traveling to the country for more than
25 years. “We’re very concerned”.

Madagascar is a conservation hot spot –a term for a
region that is very biodiverse and particularly
threatened- and while that makes the island special,
it is hardly alone. Conservationists estimate that
extinctions worlwide are occurring at a pace that is
up 1,000 times as great as history’s background rate
before human beings began proliferating. Worse,
that die-off could be accelerating.

Price of Extinction.

There have been five extinction waves in the
planet’s history –includimg the Permian extinction
250 million years ago, when an estimated 70% of all
terrestrial animals and 96% of all marine creatures
vanished, and, most recently, the Cretaceous event
65 million years ago, which ended the reign of the
dinosaurs. Though scientists have directly assessed
the visibility of fewer than 3% of the world’s
described specioes, the sample polling of animal
populations so far suggests that we may have
entered what will be the planet’s six great extibction
wave. And this time the cause isn’t an errant
asteroid or megavolcanoes. It’s us.

Through our growing numbers, our thirst for natural
resources and, most of all, climate change –which,
by one reckoning, could help carry off 20% to 30%
of all species before the end of the century- we’re
shaping an Earth that will be biologically
impoverished. A 2008 assessment by the
International Union for Conservation of Nature found
that nearly 1 in 4 mammals worldwide was at risk
for extinction, ikncluding endangered species like the
famous Tasmanian devil. Overfishing and
acidification of the oceans are threatening marine
species as diverse as the bluefin tuna and reef-
forming corals. “Just about everything is going
down”, says Simon Stuart, head of the IUCN’s
species survival commission. “And when I think
about the impact of climate change, it really scares
me”.

Scary for conservationists, yes, but the question
arises. Why should it matter to rest of us? After all,
nearly all the species that were ever alive in the
past are gone today. Evolution demands extinction.
When we’re using the term extinction to talk about
the fate of the U.S. auto industry, does it really
matter if we lose species like the Holdridge’s toad,
the Yangtze River dolphin and the golden toad, all of
which have effectively disappeared in recent years?
What does the loss of a few species among millions
matter?

For one thing, we’re animals too, depemndent on
this planet like every other form of life. The more
species living in an ecosystem, the healthier and
more productive it is, which matters for us –a recent
study by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) estimates
the economic value of the Amazon rain forest’s
ecosystem services to be up to $100 per hectare
(about 2 ½ acres). When we pollute and deforest
and make a mess of the ecological web, we’re
taking out mortgages on the Earth that we can’t pay
back –and those loans will come due. Then there are
the undiscovered organisms and animals that could
serve as the basis of needed medicines –as the
original ingredients of aspirin were derived from the
herb meadowsweet- unless we unwittingly destroy
them first. “We have plenty of stories about how the
loss of biodiversity creates problems for people”,
says Carter Roberts, WWF’s president.

Forests razed can grow back, polluted air and water
can be cleaned –but extinction is forever. And we’re
not talking about losing just a few species. In fact,
conservationists quietly acknowledge that we’ve
entered an age of triage, when we might havee to
decide which species can truly be saved. The worst-
case scenarios of habitat loss and climate change –
and that’s the pathway we seem to be on- show the
planet losing hundreds of thousands to millions of
species, many of which we haven’t even discovered
yet. The result could be a virtual genocide of much
of the animal world and an irreversible
impoverishment of our planet. Humans woul survive,
but we would have doomed ourselves to what
naturalist E.O. Wilson calls the Eremozoic Era –the
Age of Loneliness.

So if you care about tigers and tamarins, rhinos and
orangutans, if you believe Earth is more than just a
home for 6·7 billion human beings and counting,
then you should be scared. But fear shouldn’t keave
us paralyzed. Environmental groups worlwide are
responding with new methods to new threats to
wildlife. In hot spots like Madagascar and Brazil,
conservationists are working with locals on the
ground, ensuring that the protection on endangered
species is tied to the welfare of the people who live
closest to them. A strategy known as avoided
deforestation goes further, incentivizing
environmental protection by putting a price on the
carbon locked in rain forests and allowing countries
to trade credits in an international market, provided
that the carbon stays in the trees and is not cut or
burned. And as global warming forces animals to
migrate in order to escape changing climates,
conservationists are looking to create protected
corridors that would give the especies room to roam.
It’s uncertain thast any of this will stop the sixth
extinction wave, let alone preserve the biodiversity
we still enjoy, but we have no choice but to try. “We
have a window of opportunity”, says Kassie Siegel,
director of the climate, energy and air program of
the Center for Biological Diversity (CDB). “But it’s
slamming shut”.

To Save the Species, Save the People.

Madagascar, which Mittermeier calls the “hottest of
the hot spots”, is where all the new strategies can
be road-tested. In 2003, after decades when
conservation was barely on the government’s
agenda, then-President Marc Ravalomanana
announced that the government would triple
Madagascar’s protected areas over the following five
years. That decision helped underfunded parks like
Andasibe’s, which protects some of the last
untouched forest on the island. “You can’t save a
species without saving the habitat where it lives”,
says WWF’s Roberts.

Do that right, and you can even turn a profit in the
process. In Madagascar, half the revenues from
national parks are meant to go to the surrounding
communities. The reserves in turn help sustain an
industry for local guides like Razafindrasolo. In a
country as poor as Madagascar –where 61% of the
people live on less than $1 a day- it makes sense to
give locals an economic stake in preserving wildlife
rather than destroying it. “If you don’t get the
support of the people living near a conservation
area, it’s just a matter of time before you’ll lose [te
area]”, says Steven Sanderson, president of the
Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS).

Well-run ecotourism can provide support for
conservation, but even the best parks might be hard
presses to compete with the potential revenues from
logging, poaching or mining. The strategy of avoided
deforestation, however, offers much more. Rain
forests like those in Madagascar contain billions of
tons of carbon; destroying the trees and releasing
the carbon not only kills local species but also
speeds global warming. Proposals in the global
climate negotiations would allow countries to offset
some of their greenhouse-gas emissions by paying
rain-forest nations to preserve their trees. It’s win-
win, with both the climate and the critters getting a
boost. In eastern Madagascar, CI an WCS are
working together to protect about 350,000 hectares
in the Makira Forest with a range of carbon investors
that include Mitsubishi and Pearl Jam. Closer to
Andasibe, CI and its partners are hiring villagers to
plant trees on eroded land, which creates corridors to
connect fragmented habitats, may earn carbon
revenues, may earn carbon revenues and provides
needed employement. “We’re bringing back the
shelter of the forests, and we don’t have to cut
trees”, says Herve Tahirimalala, a Malgasy who paid
$100 a month to work on the project.

The corridors created by CI’s Andasibe tree-planting
program show how a small tweak can reduce the
species-killing effects of climate change –but also
how longer-term fixes sre needed. Fragmented
habitats are problematic because many endangered
species wind up trapped in green oases surrounded
by degraded land. As global warming changes the
climate, species will try to migrate, often right into
the path of development and extinction. What good
is a nature reserve –fought for, paid for and
protected- if global warming renders it unlivable?
“Climate change could undermine the conservation
work of whole generations”, says Larry Schweiger,
president of the National Wildlife Federation. “It
turns out you can’t save species without saving the
sky”.

That will mean reducing carbon emissions as fast as
possible. In the U.S., the CBD has made an art out
of using the Endangered Spdecies Act, which
mandates that the government pevent the extinction
of listed species, to force Wahington to act on global
warming. The CBD’s Siegel led a successful
campaign to get the Bush Administration to list the
polar bear as threatebed by climate change, and she
expects more species to follow. “Polar bears are the
canaries in the coal mine”, says Siegel.

Why We Can’t Wait.

What’s especially frightening is how vulnerable even
the best conservation work can be to rapid changes –
both climatic and governmental. Over the past
couple of months, Madagascar has fallen into a
political abyss, with Andry Rajoelina –the former
mayor of Antananarivo, the capital- forcing former
President Ravalomanana from office on the heels of
deadly protests. As a result, development aid to the
desperately poor country has been halted, and
conservation work has been disrupted. Reports have
filtered back of armed gangs stepping into the
vacuum to illegally log the nation’s few remaining
forests. “They’re ripping out valuable timber as
quickly as they can”, says Mittermeier.

News like that can tempt even the staunchest
defenders of wildlife to simply surrender. And why
shouldn’t they? In a world where hundreds of
millions of human beings still go hungry and the
global recession has left all but the wealthiest
fearing for their future, it’s easy to wonder why we
should be concerned about the dwindling of the
planet’s biodiversity.

The answer is that we can’t afford not to. The same
natural qualities that sustain wildlife –clean water,
untainted land, unbroken forests- ultimately sustain
us as well, whether we live in a green jungle or a
concrete one. But there is an innate value to
untrammeled biodiversity too- one that goes beyond
our own survival. When that is lost, we are
irretrievably diminished. “We live on a very special
planet- the only planet that we know has life”, says
Mittermeier. “For me, conservation is ultimately a
moral obligation and simply the right thing to do”.
That leaves us a choice. We can save life on this
special planet, or be its unwitting executioner.


   
TIME, United States.
  TIME, United States.
April 13, 2009.
   
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