Tuesday, October 15, 2019
Not So Many Wings, Need a Lot More Prayers
The decline in the North American
bird population is staggering but is highly reflective of avian life the world
over. A study published in Science in mid-September, based on detailed
analyses of bird surveys, radar data and other empirical studies conducted
since 1970, presented the bad news. Simply put, the North American bird
population has declined by 2.9 billion, across 529 bird species. While
biologists suspected significant declines in bird population, the sheer number
caught the scientific community by surprise. Overall, a 29% decline.
Amina Khan, writing for the September
21st Los Angeles Times, grapples with the ramification of such a
steep reduction in our avian population: “‘Three billion was a pretty
astounding number for us,’ said lead author Kenneth Rosenberg, a conservation
scientist at Cornell University and the American Bird Conservancy… Steven
Beissinger, a conservation biologist at UC Berkeley, called the results and
their implications ‘dizzying.’… ‘I was pretty surprised,’ said Beissinger, who
was not involved in the study. ‘We don’t usually think in billions of birds.’
“Of those lost birds, 90% came from
just 12 bird families that include common and widespread species such as
sparrows, swallows, warblers and finches… Declines in the abundance of common
species may not seem as dramatic as the endangerment of rare ones, but it is a
very serious form of ecosystem erosion, the scientists said.
“That’s because abundant species
often play important roles in their biomes, whether they control pests,
pollinate flowers, disperse seeds, provide food for other animals and even
contribute to the natural beauty of an area that draws tourists who support
local economies… ‘When you’re losing abundance, you’re losing the fabric of the
food chains, the fabric of the ecosystems — more perhaps than losing one rare
species,’ Rosenberg said.
“It’s hard to say what ecosystem
services have been lost or degraded because of the loss of birds over the last
half-century, Beissinger said. For example, if there were more birds around to
eat bugs, farmers might be using less pesticide.
“Other formerly common species have
fallen from mere loss of abundance to elimination… Rosenberg pointed to the
example of the passenger pigeon. Once it was probably the most abundant bird on
the planet, but it was hunted into extinction by 1914. He added that the trend
line of passenger pigeons’ losses looks similar to the trend seen in the new
study [noted above], according to work by one of his coauthors, Jessica Stanton
of the U.S. Geological Survey.
“‘Nobody ever thought the passenger
pigeon would go extinct — and it did in a relatively short period,’ Rosenberg
said. ‘We’re not saying these other birds are on their way to extinction, but
it certainly should give us pause.’
“Across ecosystems, grassland birds —
a group that includes sparrows and meadowlarks — were hit the hardest, the
researchers said. Since 1970, their numbers have fallen by more than 720
million, representing 53% of the initial population.
“Taken together, more than 1 billion
birds have been lost from all forest biomes. Shorebirds, long threatened by the
draining of coastal wetlands and urbanization, saw declines of more than 37%.
Even the 10 nonnative species counted in the paper experienced a population
loss of 63%.
“The researchers did not weigh in on
specific causes for these declines. But Rosenberg said other work has pointed
to habitat loss, pollution, pesticides, and the intensification and expansion
of agriculture as likely culprits.
“There were a few success stories in
the data that could offer a road map for aiding other bird populations,
Rosenberg said. Wetland birds, such as ducks and geese, have increased,
primarily because of conservation efforts that protected wetland habitats over
the last few decades. (Much of that conservation was driven by hunters, who
wanted to maintain healthy populations, he added.)”
As major gatherings of younger people
the world over, millions of those concerned, mounted the largest climate change
protest in history, as they raised their voices to let their elders know that
it would be they who would suffer the most from the escalating environmental
damage, the litany of bad news – from species loss, climate change, pollution
and deforestation – suggested that the majority of the earth’s future
population would live on a seriously environmentally degraded planet. This is
the legacy of failed leadership, greedy corporations, unsustainable
contributions to greenhouse gasses and contracting forests, jungles and
undersea plant life.
No one on earth typifies the disdain
for the required responsibility to restore a livable planet than Donald Trump.
His legacy is one of climate change denial, withdrawal from international
treaties focused on the reduction of greenhouse gasses, opening of national
parks and off-shore tracts to raw exploitation with the accompanying
environmental degradation, encouraging greater usage of fossil fuels, granting
permission for industrial polluters to dump their effluents into the
atmosphere, public waterways and onto public lands, and desperately fighting
environmental programs – like California’s 50-year practice of imposing
increasing restrictions on cars, fuel efficiency and permitted levels of greenhouse
gasses. Clearly, history will depict his policies and practices in the
unkindest light. But exactly what will
life be like in 50 or 100 years?
I’m
Peter Dekom, and the canary in the coal mine died a while ago… but why we still
have coal mines is difficult to comprehend in 2019.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment