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- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu
- Newsgroups: talk.environment
- Subject: Bio-diversity (article)
- Message-ID: <9301202241.AA02967@poly.math.cor>
- Date: 20 Jan 93 22:44:00 GMT
- Sender: Notesfile to Usenet Gateway <notes@igc.apc.org>
- Lines: 174
- Nf-ID: #N:9301202241.AA02967@poly.math.cor:1261795236:000:9374
- Nf-From: math.cornell.edu!harelb Jan 20 14:44:00 1993
-
-
- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (misc.activism.progressive co-moderator)
- Subject: Bio-diversity (article)
-
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- "[...] The local geckos ate the dead flies and were poisoned with
- DDT. The geckos were eaten by housecats and the cats died. Then
- ensued a plague of rats which ate the people's food and threatened
- them with bubonic plague. So goes the food chain and the law of
- unintended consequences."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
- =======================
- Movement MEANINGS
- =======================
- B I O D I V E R S I T Y
- =======================
- B y A n n A l p e r
- =======================
- Z Magazine, November, 1991
- (See bottom for more about Z)
-
- RECENTLY CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER, asserting on the essay page of Time that
- nature is here to serve man [sic], urged his readers to distinguish
- between environmental "necessities" like protecting the ozone layer
- and environmental "luxuries" such as saving the spotted owl. The
- variety of nature is "a good," he says, "a high esthetic good. But it
- is no more than that." If erasing the old-growth forests in which the
- owl lives saves loggers' jobs, let's get on with it.
-
- But surely Krauthammer knows by now that saving forests is one of the
- two principal ways of *protecting* the ozone layer, which he
- recognizes as an "environmental necessity." The role of forests in
- sopping up carbon, the principal ozone depleter and the largest waste
- product of industrial society, has been covered exhaustively in media
- reports of the tropical rainforest destruction in South America. Never
- let us underestimate the power of denial, however. Species homo
- sapiens can go to truly mind-boggling lengths to keep from
- acknowledging facts too discomfiting to bear.
-
- Here are more: Old-growth forests such as those of the owl in question
- have already disappeared from private lands. They're 90 percent gone
- from public land. We're fighting over the last 7 percent not destroyed
- in the mere 150 years since the white people came to the Pacific
- Northwest. But what's left of the Northwest temperate rainforests
- still contains more biomass to bind carbon than the Brazilian
- rainforests.
-
- Ferns, mosses, lichens, fungi, and soil-enriching microbes along with
- a variety of trees and brush protect water levels and quality, as well
- as the quality of soil in the Northwest and the productivity of its
- fisheries. The tree farms that supplant them, containing only one or
- two variety of trees, are unable to do this.
-
- Only days after the publication of Krauthammer's remarks, we were
- reminded how critical this old-growth biodiversity is. The Department
- of Agriculture announced that Bristol Myers-Squibb has been given
- permission to harvest the Pacific yew for an anti-cancer drug found in
- its bark. This hitherto scorned old-growth tree, relegated until now
- to the slash pile for burning, will produce enough pure taxol to treat
- 12,500 ovarian and breast cancer patients in clinical trials. The
- women who stand to benefit would hardly describe taxol as a "luxury."
-
- Over millennia, many plants have developed chemicals to fight off
- predators which would otherwise eat or infest them. These same
- chemicals appear to fight off some cancers as well. A few years ago,
- the rosy periwinkle of Madagascar was found to contain a substance
- which is now very effectively used in the treatment of leukemias and
- other cancers. As a matter of fact, one-third of the medicines we buy
- in our pharmacies are extracted from higher plants. Some of these
- medicines can be synthesized in the lab, now that nature has shown us
- the way, but their genetic structure is so complex they'd probably
- have escaped the human imagination forever.
-
- How many necessary medicines, foods, and fuels there are yet to be
- found is a question no one can answer. Though we've discovered and
- described one-and-a-quarter million species of plants and animals,
- estimates of the numbers of species on earth range from 5 to 30
- million and they're going extinct at a rate hundreds of times faster
- than in the days before industrialization. Destroying the Pacific
- old-growth forest is destroying a genetic library still largely
- uninvestigated.
-
- Nor are beneficial plants all that's disappearing. The spotted owl has
- been designated an "indicator species," which recognizes that the
- environment required by the owl is required by other species as well.
- Five endangered or threatened animals -- the gray wolf, grizzly bear,
- Columbian white-tailed deer, bald eagle and peregrine falcon -- share
- Northwest old-growth forests.
-
- There are 15 other old-growth forest species which are candidates for
- those lists. They include the Iynx, wolverine, Pt. Reyes mountain
- beaver, pond turtle, and several kinds of birds and fish. Many more
- species have been designated by the state of Oregon. Though recent
- research has shown many of these animals capable of surviving in young
- and mature natural forests, many cannot. In managed tree farms, few
- can.
-
- Should we care about animals when loggers' jobs are at stake? In a
- word, yes. These animals are part of an eco-system that species homo
- sapiens (including loggers) is part of, too. Earth's varied ecosystems
- have evolved over billions of years and sustain all life on the
- planet. It's not unreasonable to say that every living thing
- potentially affects every other living thing.
-
- A well-known example of interconnectedness given by population
- biologist Paul Ehrlich is that of the spraying of DDT in Borneo some
- years ago to control mosquitos. The DDT not only wiped out the
- mosquitos, but wasps and flies as well. Caterpillars, no longer eaten
- by wasps, devoured the thatched roofs of the people's houses, causing
- them to fall in. The local geckos ate the dead flies and were poisoned
- with DDT. The geckos were eaten by housecats and the cats died. Then
- ensued a plague of rats which ate the people's food and threatened
- them with bubonic plague. So goes the food chain and the law of
- unintended consequences.
-
- Still another consequence of ecosystem destruction is the foreclosing
- of new food and energy sources. Just when humankind needs such sources
- desperately, we are endangering animals such as the Amazon giant river
- turtle, whose meat is both nutritious and delicious and can be
- produced without cutting down the rainforests, as cattle-raising
- requires. Nor are wheat, corn, and rice, our principal grain staples,
- necessarily the best ones. There are more nutritious grains not under
- cultivation and thousands more edible plants and animals we've not
- learned to use. Many are in the tropical rainforests of South America.
-
- When explorer Amerigo Vespucci first came to the Brazilian coast
- almost 500 years ago, he was impressed with the native diet of tubers,
- delicious fruits, crab, lobster, oysters, and all manner of fish,
- turtles, and game. He might be shocked to know that only the richest
- inhabitants of the area can now enjoy such a diet and that only a
- sixth of the native people survive because of the loss of their
- habitat and other ills brought by "civilization." He would surely be
- astonished by Brazil's medical problems, for he found the inhabitants
- of the area amazingly healthy and long-lived. "If one of them should
- chance to fall ill," wrote Vespucci, "he immediately gathers herbs and
- cures himself." How many of those medicinal herbs have gone the way of
- their users, we can only guess.
-
- What's certain is that saving our natural world is inseparable from
- saving ourselves. The contest is not between loggers and owls, as
- Krauthammer would have us believe. but between our very short-term
- economic interests and our long-term survival. If we don't soon
- acknowledge our biology, we're history. Z
-
- ---
-
- Ann Alper is a psychotherapist, an occasional contributor to the op-ed
- page of the Lost Angeles Times.
-
- ******************************************************************
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- "Z is an independent, progressive monthly magazine of critical thinking
- on political, cultural, social, and economic life in the United
- States. It sees the racial, sexual, class, and political dimensions
- of personal life as fundamental to understanding and improving
- contemporary circumstances; and it aims to assist activist efforts to
- attain a better future."
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