| Endangered SpeciesWhy Be Concerned? | |
![]() |
WHY SPECIES |
|
In this series:
Related topics: |
SPECIES become extinct for various reasons. Consider three main causes. Humans are indirectly responsible for two of them and directly responsible for the other. Habitat Destruction
|
![]() |
|
| Plants, animals, birds, reptiles, and insects die off as man fells trees |
The situation is similar in the world's wetlands, another threatened habitat. Developers drain these areas so that they can build houses, or farmers convert them into arable land they can cultivate. In the last 100 years, as much as 90 percent of Europe's dry grassland has been taken over for agriculture. The loss of pasture in Britain over the last 20 years has prompted a 64-percent decline in the number of song thrushes.
Although Time magazine calls the island of Madagascar "a geological Noah's ark," its abundant variety of wildlife is in danger. When the population rises and international indebtedness grows, pressure on the island's inhabitants to turn forests into rice paddies increases. Because three quarters of the golden bamboo lemur's habitat has disappeared in the last 20 years, only 400 of these animals remain.
Man's radical change of land use certainly undermines regional wildlife. For another example, consider the Polynesians, who arrived in Hawaii 1,600 years ago. As a result of their activity, 35 species of birds became extinct.
Early settlers who came to Australia and New Zealand imported domestic cats, some of which became wild. According to New Scientist magazine, these feral cats now prey on 64 species of native Australian mammals. Together with imported European red foxes, they attack remnant populations of threatened species.
Hunting is no new phenomenon. The Bible account in Genesis describes the rebel Nimrod, a hunter who lived more than 4,000 years ago. Although there is no mention of his wiping out a whole species, he was nevertheless a formidable exponent of the hunt.Genesis 10:9.
Through the centuries hunters have exterminated lions from Greece and Mesopotamia, hippopotamuses from Nubia, elephants from North Africa, bears and beavers from Britain, and wild oxen from Eastern Europe. "During the 1870s and 1880s, hunters killed a quarter of a million elephants in East Africa alone," reports the BBC listings magazine, Radio Times. "For half a century, Africa rang to the rapid fire of people of fame, fortune and rank, blasting away at elephants, rhinos, giraffes, big cats and whatever else caught their
Return to the situation of the majestic tiger. Censuses in the 1980's indicated that conservation efforts had met with success. "Nonetheless, things were not as they seemed," notes the 1995 Britannica Book of the Year. "More careful counts revealed that previous censuses had been inflated by officials who either were in connivance with poachers or were merely eager to impress their
Trade in elephant ivory, rhino horn, tiger skins, and other animal parts is now a multibillion-dollar black-market business, second only to drug smuggling, notes Time. And it is not limited to large mammals. In 1994 traditional Chinese medicine consumed a staggering 20 million sea horses, causing catches to fall by a reported 60 percent in two years in some areas of Southeast Asia.
It is not difficult to identify who is to blame when a species is hunted out of existence. Then, what about collectors? An endangered macaw, the golden conure, fetches a black-market trader in Brazil a reported $500. But when he sells it abroad, he gains more than three and a half times that sum.
Wars and their by-products, growing crowds of refugees, together with a spiraling birthrate, increased pollution, and even tourism, threaten endangered species. Sightseers in powerboats injure the dolphins they flock to see, and underwater noise from the boats can interfere with the dolphins' delicate echo-location system.
After this sorry catalog of human mayhem, you may well wonder, 'What are conservationists doing to preserve threatened species, and how successful are they?'
Appeared in Awake! August 8, 1996 |
Home | Beliefs | Future | Medical | Topics | Contact Us | Publications | Languages | Search | Index
Giant Panda: Zoo de la Casa de Campo, Madrid
Copyright © 2011 Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania. All rights reserved.