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Earth is on its way to the biggest mass extinction since the dinosaurs, scientists warn

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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Have humans damaged the Earth's ecosystems so severely that we're well on our way to the biggest mass extinction since the dinosaurs vanished 66 million years ago? And are we running out of time to reverse the negative impacts of our actions?

Three scientists who have studied extinctions of thousands of species of vertebrates believe so, though others are skeptical of the doomsday-like findings.

A new study published Monday paints a grim picture: The populations of nearly 9,000 vertebrate species, including mammals such as cheetahs, lions and giraffes, have significantly declined between 1900 and 2015. Almost 200 species have gone extinct in the past 100 years alone — a rate of two per year. The study says the losses are indicative of the planet's “ongoing six major extinction events” and has cascading consequences for human life on Earth.

“This is the case of a biological annihilation occurring globally, even if the species these populations belong to are still present somewhere on Earth,” Rodolfo Dirzo, the study's co-author and a Stanford University biology professor, said in a news release.

The researchers analyzed 27,600 species of birds, amphibians, mammals and reptiles — about half of all known vertebrate species — and found that 8,851 (about 32 percent) have seen declining populations and shrinking areas of habitat. A more detailed analysis on 177 mammal species found that more than 40 percent have experienced significant drops in population. The findings, the study says, mean that billions of animal populations that once roamed the Earth are now gone.

[Earth is on brink of a sixth mass extinction, scientists say, and it’s humans’ fault]

The authors describe the shrinking population of species as “a massive erosion of the greatest biological diversity in the history of Earth.”

“Thus, we emphasize that the sixth mass extinction is already here and the window for effective action is very short, probably two or three decades at most,” the authors wrote. “All signs point to ever more powerful assaults on biodiversity in the next two decades, painting a dismal picture of the future of life, including human life.”

A few examples: There were only a little more than 7,000 cheetahs in existence last year, and their population may drop another 53 percent over the next 15 years, according to National Geographic. Borneo and Sumatran orangutans have been considered endangered for years mainly because of loss of habitat.

The population of African lions has dropped by more than 40 percent in the last 20 years. West African lions, in particular, are nearing extinction, with only about 400 animals left. Historically, lions roamed southern Europe, the Middle East, northwestern India and most of Africa. Today, there are only scattered populations in sub-Saharan Africa and a few remnants at Gir Forest National Park in India, according to the study.

The driving force is a steady drumbeat of human activities that result in habitat losses, pollution and climate disruption, among others.

“This is the first mass extinction which the cause knows what it's doing and is harming itself,” another co-author, Stanford University biology professor Paul Ehrlich, said. “When the asteroid hit 66 million years ago, the asteroid wasn't making a choice. Now the driver is human overpopulation and overconsumption by the rich, and that's generally accepted.”

For instance, wildlife habitats have been plowed, paved and replaced with buildings, strip malls and agricultural lands, Ehrlich said.

“The massive loss of populations and species reflects our lack of empathy to all the wild species that have been our companions since our origins,” the study's lead author, Gerardo Ceballos, an ecology professor at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, said in the news release. “It is a prelude to the disappearance of many more species and the decline of natural systems that make civilization possible.”

Some in the scientific community disagree with the study's grim findings.

[The world might see a mass extinction of primates if humans don’t act]

Doug Erwin, curator at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, said placing the ongoing extinctions of animal species in the same playing field as the mass extinction events in history, or the Big Five, amounts to “junk science.”

“Many of those making facile comparisons between the current situation and past mass extinctions don't have a clue about the difference in the nature of the data, much less how truly awful the mass extinctions recorded in the marine fossil record actually were,” he told the Atlantic last month. “It is absolutely critical to recognize that I am NOT claiming that humans haven't done great damage to marine and terrestrial, nor that many extinctions have not occurred and more will certainly occur in the near future. But I do think that as scientists we have a responsibility to be accurate about such comparisons.”

Stuart Pimm, head of conservation ecology at Duke University in North Carolina, said the study unnecessarily raises alarms by saying the Earth is already in the midst of a cataclysmic event. Pimm believes the sixth mass extinction is just beginning, and not well on its way.

“It's a little bit dramatic,” Pimm said. “Yes, we are driving species to extinction a thousand times faster than we should. So yes, there is a problem. But on the other hand, telling people that we're all doomed and going to die isn't terribly helpful.”

Ehrlich said the point of the research is exactly that — to cause alarm.

“I am an alarmist. My colleagues are alarmists. We're alarmed, and we're frightened. And there's no other way to put it,” he said. “It's largely a political and economic problem. We have a government that's doing everything they can to push these things in the wrong direction. We have economists who think they can actually grow forever in a finite problem.”

Others agree with the authors, saying the study's findings are bleak — and rightfully so.

Kieran Suckling, executive director of the Center for Biological Diversity, said the researchers accurately show that population losses are not just confined to a certain geographic area or within certain species of animals.

“What they show is it's a mass, global phenomenon,” Suckling said. “I think they made the case very strongly that we are right now in the sixth extinction, and if we continue the trend we're on, we're going to be looking at 50 to 75 percent of our species lost over the next hundred years.”

Noah Greenwald, endangered species director for the Center for Biological Diversity, agreed with the researchers' conclusion that the window for humans to take action is quickly getting narrow.

“The study is right in raising alarm bells … especially with our change in climate,” Greenwald said. “We really need to protect as much habitat as we can now. Our population continues to expand, our consumption continues to expand. We're going in the wrong direction, quickly.”

[Cheetahs are racing toward extinction]

The concept of a sixth mass extinction is not new, and the study is not the first to make the case that Earth is already in the middle of it.

Two years ago, some of the same researchers argued that species are disappearing at a rate unparalleled since the Cretaceous mass extinction of dinosaurs. The 2015 study found that vertebrate species have been disappearing up to about 100 times the normal rate over the last century.

On a happier note, scientists point to efforts to save endangered species and their habitats.

“We've dramatically increased the area protected by national parks, increased the area of the oceans that's being protected. We have reduced deforestation rate in the Amazon,” Pimm said. “I'm not trying to say that it's all good news, but there's good news out there.”




https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...-1220pm:homepage/story&utm_term=.8972358d91bd
 
Couldn't you look back every decade since the beginning of written language, and find doomsday prognosticators? - both religious and scientific.

That being said - I hope these guys are wrong.
 
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BAU

@CuffyMeh: I guess 6 seconds before the end of the video is as good a place as any to drop this insignificant factoid.
 
So did ciggy quit his job yet? I mean there's no sense working any longer since we're ****ed
 
If there has already been five...what makes anyone think there wouldn't be a sixth regardless

Because they don't just happen "randomly"; they happen in response to specific events.

If they just happened willy-nilly, none of us would be here.
The simple fact that science shows us rapidly increasing CO2 levels were the cause in the past implies we should be paying pretty close attention to the massive CO2 level increases we are currently responsible for due to our burning of sequestered carbon sources.

And, as already noted: "there actually was a wolf"......
 
So, did these researchers account for the expanding habitats of invasive species thanks to man? Fire ants were imported from South America. The bug that causes citrus greening was imported from Asia. The Lion Fish is an Asian fish that is now thriving in Florida waters because they have no natural predators here. I could go on and on....
 
Because they don't just happen "randomly"; they happen in response to specific events.

If they just happened willy-nilly, none of us would be here.
The simple fact that science shows us rapidly increasing CO2 levels were the cause in the past implies we should be paying pretty close attention to the massive CO2 level increases we are currently responsible for due to our burning of sequestered carbon sources.

And, as already noted: "there actually was a wolf"......

Yeah, that's what they were saying in the 70's, wasn't it?
 
So, did these researchers account for the expanding habitats of invasive species thanks to man? Fire ants were imported from South America. The bug that causes citrus greening was imported from Asia. The Lion Fish is an Asian fish that is now thriving in Florida waters because they have no natural predators here. I could go on and on....

....what is your point? One major invasive species can cause the extinction of dozens of native species.

+1 - 24 = "a positive number"????
 
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In fact, they've been saying the CO2 accumulation is problematic as far back as the 1950s. Exxon's own internal documentation stated this further back than the 70s.

All those accurate predictions from back then were pretty epic too, oh wait...
 
....what is your point? One major invasive species can cause the extinction of dozens of native species.

+1 - 24 = "a positive number"????

My point is that this is a very fluid thing, and I believe they are discounting species that are benefiting from man's activities.
 
All those accurate predictions from back then were pretty epic too, oh wait...

They've been quite accurate. Ozone was on its way out before we banned CFCs.
James Hansen's temperature estimate is pretty close to spot on, as well.

I'm sure you can find TIME magazine covers with silly headlines, though. And despite the number of times we tell you to get science projections from scientists, you never fail us in posting silly nonsense crap wildly distanced from mainstream science.
 
My point is that this is a very fluid thing, and I believe they are discounting species that are benefiting from man's activities.

What part of +1 -12 = -11; or +1 -24 = -23....
is too difficult to understand here? Losing environmental diversity is simply the start, until you hit an ecosystem tipping point and cascading effects.
 
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