[net.bio] More on extinctions

carnes@gargoyle.UUCP (Richard Carnes) (09/29/86)

Excerpted from an article appearing in the Chicago Tribune, 9/21/86,
by Erik Eckholm (author of *Losing Ground*):
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NEW YORK -- Leading biologists, fearful that a significant share of
living species will disappear before they are even discovered, are
escalating their efforts to save tropical rain forests and other
imperiled ecosystems.  

With recent indications that fewer than one-tenth of the earth's
species of plants and animals have been identified, much less studied
for scientific lessons or economic utility, biologists are also
calling for a new age of natural exploration, a crash effort to find
and study millions of species before they are wiped out.

In recent decades, these scientists say, dramatic progress in
molecular biology has stolen status and resources from the task of
describing and comparing different forms of life.  Too few scientists
today are trained in taxonomy, the systematic ordering of species.  

Yet knowledge of species diversity is the foundation of ecological
understanding, they assert, and also provides the essential raw
material for new genetic engineering technologies.  Time is short,
they add, because as tropical forests, the most diverse ecosystems on
earth, are cleared, thousands of species are possibly being lost each
year.

"It's astonishing that something as basic and important as the amount
of diversity of life on earth is largely unmapped," said Edward O.
Wilson of Harvard University. ...

Wilson, an expert on insects and on sociobiology, the study of
evolutionary influences on behavior, is one of several leading
biologists who have recently entered the political arena to battle
for worldwide conservation.

They are especially alarmed by trends in the tropics, where once-vast
rain forests are giving way to farms, ranches and logging enterprises
in what critics say are often ill-planned development policies.

"In the past, many biologists thought it was almost unscientific to
get too involved in conservation politics," said Thomas E. Lovejoy,
vice president of the World Wildlife Fund in Washington.  "But no
more.  The rate of loss is suddenly dawning on people."

While concerns voiced in the last decade that all rain forests would
be stripped by the century's end have proved overstated, experts say,
within a few decades the destruction will be almost total in some
regions, such as Central America and West Africa, and it is spreading
inexorably in the Amazon, Southeast Asia and elsewhere.

In their effort to curb forest damages and to promote establishment
of more nature reserves, biologists have found themselves treading
into unfamiliar territory.  

They have begun, for example, to join forces with environmental
activists to scrutinize the policies of aid agencies like the World
Bank and the United States Agency for International Development,
whose loans for agriculture or forestry in developing countries can
influence whether lands are developed rationally or ravaged. ...

Most of the undocumented, endangered species are insects, and many of
the rest are other invertebrates or plants.  The plight of beetles
and weeds does not engender the same public sympathies that whales,
eagles or pandas do.

Yet the small, obscure creatures, scientists observe, are the
foundation of intricate webs that ultimately support all life,
including humans.  An insect may be vital for pollinating or
defending an important species of tree, while a disappearing plant
can take with it many interdependent species such as insects and
higher animals.

Each species, whether charming to most humans or not, is a unique
repository of enormous genetic and ecological information.
Furthermore, notes Jared M. Diamond, an ecologist at the University
of California at Los Angeles, "you never know when one will prove to
be of economic value, or a menace we should know about." ...

Is it worth the effort to locate and describe millions more species?
These scientists answer with a resounding yes.

"We're talking about the fundamental data base for the biological
sciences," said Lovejoy, an expert in tropical ecology.  "How can we
possibly manage the earth properly if we haven't got a grip on the
diversity of life?"

"I put this in the same category as doing a complete map of the human
genome," Wilson said, referring to recent proposals for locating all
the genes in all the human chromosomes and elucidating their
chemistry.  But in the case of species diversity, he added, "we've
got a time limit.  Biologists have a sense of urgency about this, or
shall I say controlled panic."
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Richard Carnes