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- <text id=89TT0041>
- <title>
- Jan. 02, 1989: Biodiversity:The Death Of Birth
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 02, 1989 Planet Of The Year:Endangered Earth
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PLANET OF THE YEAR, Page 32
- BIODIVERSITY - The Death of Birth
- </hdr><body>
- <p>THE PROBLEM: Man is recklessly wiping out life on earth
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden
- </p>
- <p> Before Brazil's great land rush, the emerald rain forests of
- Rondonia state were an unspoiled showcase for the diversity of
- life. In this lush territory south of the Amazon, there was
- hardly a break in the canopy of 200-ft.-tall trees, and
- virtually every acre was alive with the cacophony of all kinds
- of insects, birds and monkeys. Then, beginning in the 1970s,
- came the swarms of settlers, slashing and burning huge swaths
- through the forest to create roads, towns and fields. They came
- to enjoy a promised land, but they have merely produced a
- network of devastation. The soil that supported a rich rain
- forest is not well suited to corn and other crops, and most of
- the newcomers can eke out only an impoverished, disease-ridden
- existence. In the process, they are destroying an ecosystem and
- the millions of species of plants and animals that live in it.
- An estimated 20% of Rondonia's forest is gone, and at present
- rates of destruction it will be totally wiped out within 25
- years.
- </p>
- <p> Around the globe, on land and in the sea, the story is much
- the same. Spurred by poverty, population growth, ill-advised
- policies and simple greed, humanity is at war with the plants
- and animals that share its planet. Peter Raven, director of the
- Missouri Botanical Garden, predicts that during the next three
- decades man will drive an average of 100 species to extinction
- every day. Extinction is part of evolution, but the present rate
- is at least 1,000 times the pace that has prevailed since
- prehistory.
- </p>
- <p> Even the mass extinctions 65 million years ago that killed
- off the dinosaurs and countless other species did not
- significantly affect flowering plants, according to Harvard
- biologist E.O. Wilson. But these plant species are disappearing
- now, and people, not comets or volcanoes, are the angels of
- destruction. Moreover, the earth is suffering the decline of
- entire ecosystems -- the nurseries of new life-forms. For that
- reason, Wilson deems this crisis the "death of birth." British
- ecologist Norman Myers has called it the "greatest single
- setback to life's abundance and diversity since the first
- flickerings of life almost 4 billion years ago."
- </p>
- <p> Nearly every habitat is at risk. Forests in the northern
- hemisphere have fallen to lumbering, development and acid rain.
- Marine ecosystems around the world are threatened by pollution,
- overfishing and coastal development. It is in the tropics,
- though, that the battle to preserve what scientists call
- biodiversity will be won or lost. Tropical forests cover only 7%
- of the earth's surface, but they house between 50% and 80% of
- the planet's species.
- </p>
- <p> But should people in developed countries care about the
- survival of tropical species never seen outside a rain forest?
- Yes, they should. Variety is the spice of life, goes the saying.
- Biologists would go further and argue that variety is the very
- stuff of life. Life needs diversity because of the
- interdependencies that link flora and fauna, and because
- variation within species allows them to adapt to environmental
- challenges. But even as the world's human population explodes,
- other life is ebbing from the planet. Humanity is making a
- risky wager -- that it does not need the great variety of
- earth's species to survive.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the alarm with which scientists view this trend,
- biodiversity has just surfaced on the world's political agenda.
- The troubles of high-profile animals such as the tiger and
- rhino grab public attention, while most people hardly see the
- point of worrying about insects or plants. But extinction is the
- one environmental calamity that is irreversible. As these lowly
- species disappear unnoticed, they take with them hard-won
- lessons of survival encoded in their genes over millions of
- years.
- </p>
- <p> Only 1.7 million of the estimated 5 million to 30 million
- different life-forms on earth have been cataloged. Since
- hundreds of thousands of species may be extinct by the year
- 2000, the world has neither the scientists nor the time to
- identify the yet uncounted. "It's as though the nations of the
- world decided to burn their libraries without bothering to see
- what is in them," said University of Pennsylvania biologist
- Daniel Janzen at the TIME conference. Harvard's Wilson called
- this profligacy the "folly" that future generations are least
- likely to forgive.
- </p>
- <p> Humanity already benefits greatly from the genetic heritage
- of little-known species. Some 25% of the pharmaceuticals in use
- in the U.S. today contain ingredients originally derived from
- wild plants. Hidden anonymously in clumps of vegetation about to
- be bulldozed or burned might be plants with cures for still
- unconquered diseases. "I know of three plants with the potential
- to treat AIDS," said Janzen. "One grows in an Australian rain
- forest, one in Panama and one in Costa Rica."
- </p>
- <p> Nature's diversity offers many opportunities for
- agriculture, especially now that genetic mapping and
- engineering have given biotechnology firms the potential power
- to improve crops by transferring genes from wild strains.
- According to Wilson, biotechnology can transform a plant into
- a "loose-leaf notebook" from which scientists can select a
- particular page. Among the possible results: drought- and
- frost-resistant crops, and natural fertilizers and pesticides.
- </p>
- <p> Diversity is the raw material of earth's wealth, but
- nature's true creativity lies in the relationships that link
- various creatures. The coral in a reef or the orchid in a rain
- forest is part of an ecosystem, a fragile, often delicately
- balanced conglomeration of supports, checks and balances that
- integrate life-forms into functioning communities. Given the
- complex workings of an ecosystem, it is never clear which
- species, if any, are expendable.
- </p>
- <p> In the tropics the crucial question is how large a forest
- must be to sustain itself. If a park or protected area is too
- small to support some of its animal and plant life, the
- ecosystem will decline even with protection. As yet, no one
- knows the minimum critical size of a rain forest, but in 1979
- Thomas Lovejoy, now at the Smithsonian Institution, set up a
- 20-year experiment with the cooperation of the Brazilian
- government to determine just that for the Amazon region. Among
- the findings: the smaller the forest, the faster the decline of
- insects, birds and mammals.
- </p>
- <p> Biologists have identified numerous "hot spots" where
- ecosystems are under attack and large numbers of unique species
- face an immediate threat of elimination. Among the troubled
- areas: Madagascar, where more than 90% of the original
- vegetation has disappeared; the monsoon forests of the
- Himalayan foothills that are being denuded by villagers in
- search of firewood, building materials and arable land; New
- Caledonia, 83% of whose plants occur nowhere else; the eastern
- slope of the Andes, as well as forests in East Africa,
- peninsular Malaysia, northeast Australia and along the Atlantic
- coast of Brazil.
- </p>
- <p> Since less than 5% of the world's tropical forests receive
- any protection, the stage is set for mass extinctions. Many
- plants and animals are doomed, no matter what measures are
- taken. Some researchers estimate that at least 12% of the bird
- species in the Amazon basin, as well as 15% of the plants in
- Central and South America, can be counted among what Janzen
- calls the "living dead." Many tropical mammals and reptiles
- face only bleak survival under what amounts to house arrest in
- game parks and zoos.
- </p>
- <p> Why are so many species and environments threatened? The
- main reason is that throughout the tropics, developing nations
- are struggling to feed their peoples and raise cash to make
- payments on international debts. Many countries are chopping
- down their forests for the sake of timber exports. In Central
- America forests are giving way to cattle ranches, which supply
- beef to American fast-food chains. The pressures on forests
- have led Janzen, who has spent 26 years struggling to save
- Costa Rica's woodlands, to conclude that "everything outside
- parks will be gone, and everything inside the parks is
- threatened."
- </p>
- <p> Efforts to stop the destruction run into moral as well as
- practical obstacles. How can developed nations demand onerous
- debt payments and ask the debtors to preserve their forests?
- How can countries worry about biodiversity when their people
- are concerned with feeding themselves?
- </p>
- <p> To begin with, the rich nations must reduce the debt burden
- of the poor. But just as important is a concerted campaign to
- convince the people of developing countries that it is in their
- own long-term interest to preserve their environments. Wiping
- out forests may make developing nations momentarily richer, but
- it is bound to produce a poorer future.
- </p>
- <p> Experience has shown the Third World that destruction of
- forests can have disastrous consequences. Forests are vital
- watersheds that absorb excess moisture and anchor topsoil.
- Deforestation contributed to the recent droughts in Africa and
- the devastating mud slides in Rio de Janeiro last year. In
- Costa Rica topsoil eroded from bald hills has greatly shortened
- the life of an expensive hydroelectric dam. Alvaro Umana, Costa
- Rica's Minister of Industry, Energy and Mines, estimated that
- the surrounding watershed might have been protected 20 years
- ago for a cost of $5 million. Now the government must reforest
- the watershed at ten times that price.
- </p>
- <p> Halting the assault on biodiversity will not be easy, but
- there are many actions that governments can take. First, they
- should develop and support local scientific institutions that
- train professionals in conservation techniques. More money
- should flow into educational programs that alert people to the
- irreversible consequences of a loss of genetic diversity. An
- international, environmental version of the Peace Corps could
- spread conservation expertise to the Third World.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout the developing nations there are encouraging
- stirrings of local environmental activity. In Malaysia
- blowgun-armed Penan tribesmen have joined forces with
- environmentalists in an effort to stop rampant logging. And in
- Brazil, which has some 500 conservation organizations,
- environmentalist Jose Pedro de Oliveira Costa organized a
- coalition of legislators, conservationists, industrialists and
- media barons to stir public support to preserve Brazil's
- remaining Atlantic forests. ``The threats to the forests
- remain," said Costa, "but now at least there is a network in
- place to scream when a threat arises."
- </p>
- <p> But environmental protection must make economic sense, and
- development must go hand in hand with preservation. Development
- should be sustainable, meaning that it should use up resources
- no faster than they can be regenerated by nature. Governments
- and private firms should organize projects to show that forests
- can be used without being obliterated. If trees are cut
- selectively, forests can yield profits and survive to produce
- more money in the future. Another way to harvest cash from
- forests and other habitats is to set up tours and safaris to
- attract animal lovers and photography buffs. Long a moneymaker
- in Africa and the Galapagos Islands, this "ecotourism" is
- spreading to such places as Costa Rica.
- </p>
- <p> For sustainable development to work, observed Paulo
- Nogueira-Neto, environmental adviser to the Brazilian Ministry
- of Culture, governments will have to devise comprehensive
- national zoning plans so that their countries can achieve the
- right mix of preservation and economic growth. Local residents
- can be encouraged to earn a livelihood in the more robust
- areas, while habitats that are fragile can be protected.
- Sustainable development can proceed, noted Kenneth Piddington,
- director of the environmental department of the World Bank,
- "right up to a park's boundary."
- </p>
- <p> Financial as well as political leverage can be used in the
- cause of preservation. Governments should force local lending
- institutions to review the environmental consequences of
- proposed loans. No bank, for example, should be allowed to lend a
- company money to set up a cattle ranch if the operation would
- destroy too large a section of an endangered forest.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, the unfortunate reality is that many habitats are
- not going to be saved. To prevent the genetic legacy of those
- areas from being extinguished, as many species as possible
- should be preserved in zoos, botanical gardens and other "gene
- banks." There, scientists can study a small percentage of
- threatened organisms and have the options of later returning
- them to the wild or transplanting some of their genes into
- other species.
- </p>
- <p> But the best place to preserve the earth's biodiversity is
- in the ecosystems that gave rise to it. Man must abandon the
- belief that the natural order is mere stuff to be managed and
- domesticated, and accept that humans, like other creatures,
- depend on a web of life that must be disturbed as little as
- possible.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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