Название: The God Species: How Humans Really Can Save the Planet...
Автор: Mark Lynas
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Природа и животные
isbn: 9780007375219
isbn:
Even where absolute extinction has been avoided, many species have become functionally extinct in the sense that their remaining numbers are so few – or so scattered – that they no longer play any effective part in the ecosystem. The Iberian lynx, for example, is not extinct – not yet – in the wild, but its total population (between 84 and 143 adults; split into two isolated populations in Spain) is so tiny that it can hardly still be considered the apex predator it once was. (The lynx may be completely extinct in neighbouring Portugal: its survival has been inferred only by the discovery of a single dropping, identified by molecular analysis in 2001.3) Globally the abundance of vertebrate species fell by nearly a third between 1970 and 2006, according to the 2010 Global Biodiversity Outlook.4 Forget about extinctions: there are now a third fewer wild animals in total on the planet than there were forty years ago. That really is a shocking figure.
Even emblematic species like the tiger have their backs to the wall. Globally, only about 3,500 wild tigers remain – an extraordinary statistic given the charisma and recognition factor of this species, whose form has been emblazoned on everything from cereal packets to petrol stations. Three subspecies, the Bali, Caspian and Javan tigers, are already extinct; the South China tiger has probably joined them, for no one has seen it in the wild for 25 years.5 According to a late-2010 study, the decline in tiger numbers ‘has continued unabated’ for the last two decades: only 1,000 breeding females now survive, over less than 7 per cent of their historical range. Several Indian so-called ‘tiger reserves’ no longer have any tigers in them at all. Yet saving the tiger could cost as little as $82 million per year, according to one estimate – this is all it would take to protect the remaining 42 sites around Asia where viable tiger populations remain.6 All that is needed is a mechanism to raise the funds and an implementation plan to safeguard the reserves.
Particularly badly hit by our success have been our nearest relatives, the great apes. All are threatened with extinction in the wild. In Asia the orang-utan – once common from South China to the Himalayas – is now reduced to a remnant of between 45,000 and 69,000 individuals, mostly in the sort of lowland forests in Borneo that seem to be particularly irresistible to oil-palm plantation owners. In Africa the famous ‘gorillas in the mist’ of Virunga National Park in the Congo are down to about 380 individuals, under siege by marauding rebels as well as by poachers and bushmeat hunters. To put humans in our proper context, try entering ‘great apes’ into a www.iucnredlist.org (a website run by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, featuring its Red List of endangered species) search. When I tried, the results were as follows:
Gorilla beringei (Eastern Gorilla) – Status: Endangered, Pop. trend: decreasing.
Gorilla gorilla (Lowland Gorilla) – Status: Critically Endangered, Pop. trend: decreasing.
Homo sapiens (Human) – Status: Least Concern, Pop. trend: increasing.
Pan paniscus (Gracile Chimpanzee) – Status: Endangered, Pop. trend: decreasing.
Pan troglodytes (Common Chimpanzee) – Status: Endangered, Pop. trend: decreasing.
Pongo abelii (Sumatran Orang-utan) – Status: Critically Endangered, Pop. trend: decreasing
Pongo pygmaeus (Bornean Orang-utan) – Status: Endangered, Pop. trend: decreasing
As this list shows, we are just apes. But with our newfound global power comes a responsibility for proper global stewardship. This is a new task for humans to take on, certainly at a planetary level. But the time for this shift is long overdue, for a brief review of our history to date shows us in a very singular role: that of serial killers.
THE PLEISTOCENE OVERKILL
Many thousands of years ago a dramatic ecological calamity began to sweep through the fauna that inhabited the Earth’s disparate continents. Australia lost most of its large animals first, about 46,000 years ago. North and South America saw a similar extinction wave 13,000 years ago. New Zealand, meanwhile, kept hold of its big-bodied animals until a mere 700 years ago. What happened at each of these points in time? Did the climate perhaps change, leaving large animals stranded? Unlikely: there is no correlation between global climate change and the various extinction pulses. Did a meteor strike or a volcano blow? Again, there is no way to pin all of these different calamities, taking place at very different times, on a single geological event. Indeed, the true nature of this extinction calamity is much more familiar. It came on two legs, for a start. What links these points in time is simple: they mark the moment when humans arrived.
Modern humans have at least dealt out death fairly: we began our existence by killing each other. In what looks like a prehistoric bout of all-too-modern ethnic cleansing, Homo sapiens probably drove its closest hominid relatives, Homo neanderthalensis and Homo erectus, to oblivion. A minority of archaeologists cling to the notion that some interbreeding must have taken place, but genetic studies show this is unlikely.7 Modern human DNA instead confirms that all of us are descended from the same small initial Homo sapiens population that migrated out of Africa 50,000 years ago.8 The last Neanderthals hung on in remote mountainous parts of France until 38,000 years ago, and in southern Spain until about 30,000 years ago. The very last families died a few thousand years later in Gorham’s Cave in what is now Gibraltar, when their final refuge on the extreme southern edge of the continent was overrun.9 Officially, the direct cause of their ultimate demise is a mystery, but I think we can guess who the culprit was.
There is certainly enough evidence to mark out a crime scene. One Neanderthal skeleton discovered in Iraq bears a peculiar puncture wound on one of its ribs – a mortal injury that is most consistent with a spear thrown by an anatomically modern Homo sapiens.10 In early 2009, the anthropologist Fernando Rozzi reported the discovery of a Neanderthal child’s jawbone, found together with anatomically modern human remains at the cave of Les Rois in southwestern France.11 The bone bore characteristic cut marks, similar to those found on butchered reindeer skulls, suggesting that the tongue had been cut out and eaten. Some loose teeth scattered around also had holes drilled in them, perhaps as parts of a morbid ceremonial necklace. Rozzi drew an unequivocal conclusion: ‘Neanderthals met a violent end at our hands, and in some cases we ate them,’ he said.12
There is even stronger evidence surrounding who killed most of the world’s largest animals, for their butchered bones are found stacked up everywhere humans invaded. As palaeontologist Richard Cowen writes in The History of Life, ‘From Russia to France, [archaeo-logical] sites contain the remains of thousands of horses and hundreds of woolly mammoths.’13 СКАЧАТЬ