Dear friends,

I am forwarding here a phenomenal piece of writing seen in recent times.
It not only highlights our failure to save our unique species, but also
the fact that we fail to recognise our failure to do so... And this by
one of Australia's most renowned and well awarded Dr. Tim Flannery, who
has made contributions of international significance to the fields of
palaeontology, mammalogy and conservation and to the understanding of
science in the broader community. His work, which includes a number of
major discoveries, has received international acclaim from both peers
and professionals.
(Link to Tim Flannery's Biography
http://www.abc.net.au/science/slab/flannery/biog.htm
<http://www.abc.net.au/science/slab/flannery/biog.htm> )


Hope it brings to you the importance of conservation, the intrinsic
ecosystem values that we are losing in the process of species
extinctions.

Apologies to those with slow downloading speeds, as its a little long.
But I hope to instigate readers to turn to take more pro-active roles as
conservationists!

Cheers,

Anand Pendharkar
Director, SPROUTS
+91-98201-40254

The Third Wave

by - Tim Flannery

As I write, in mid March, a geriatric sandy-coloured rat wanders his
enclosure at the Alice Springs Desert Park. Death can't be far off for
the poor creature, which would hardly matter except that, as far as
anybody knows, he's the last central rock-rat on Earth. The species once
abounded in the rocky ranges of Australia's inland, and in places like
the MacDonnell Ranges you can still find the occasional quandong seed
cached by them long ago among the rocks. Seeds carried off and cached by
the rats sometimes grew into quandong trees but now, with the rat gone,
the quandong is declining. That's the way of things when extinction
strikes. Living networks start to unravel, and because we're part of
those networks too we inevitably feel the consequence.

It's more than 50 years since an Australian mammal became extinct, so my
generation has been spared the shame of the loss of the thylacine and
any of the other 20 unique creatures to have vanished from Australia
since European settlement. Many of us believed we'd won the war to
preserve Australia's biodiversity - that a more caring attitude towards
our wildlife, more national parks and better management practices by
rural Australians had brought the extinctions to an end. But now we know
better, for the extinctions are about to resume, and there is no doubt
that without urgent action they will build into the biggest extinction
wave of all.

The destruction of Australia's unique biodiversity began almost as soon
as Europeans arrived. The last time anyone saw Lord Howe Island's white
gallinule (a waterbird) was in 1788, when the First Fleeters pillaged
the island for food. Western Australia's big-eared hopping-mouse was
last seen in 1843; the white-footed rabbit-rat (which was very cute), in
1845; and Gould's mouse, 1857. All were once common: convicts recorded
that the rabbit-rat raided their precious grain stores in Sydney in
1789, and the naturalist John Gould wrote of seeing Gould's mouse (which
he named in honour of his wife) nesting by a homestead gate in the
Hunter Valley in the 1840s.

The loss of these creatures constitutes the first wave of Australian
extinction. The cause of their demise is difficult to determine, but the
changed use of fire, the introduction of livestock and the spread of
cats all probably played a role. Whatever the case, it's likely that our
ancestors bid them good riddance, for so little did they think of them
that all that remains of these animals today is the odd desiccated
museum skin or drawing.

The second wave of extinction began with the introduction of foxes and
rabbits, in the late nineteenth century. It rolled on right up to 1956,
and by the time it was finished 15 unique mammal species had gone
forever, including almost every mammal in the drier country bigger than
a rat and smaller than a kangaroo. Indeed, all of the land south of the
tropics was devastated to the point that most Australians my age have
never seen a wallaby or a bandicoot outside a zoo. Yet these creatures
were once so common that bounties were paid on millions of their scalps,
and they gave rise to such distinctively Australian sayings as 'on the
wallaby track' and 'lousy as a bandicoot'. I was born in the same year
as the last extinction of the second wave - that of the crescent
nailtail wallaby. The skin of the last wallaby to be preserved resides
in the Australian Museum, Sydney, where I once worked. It was the most
gorgeous creature, with fur so plush it would shame a chinchilla.

Most Australians of my parents' and grandparents' generations hardly
seemed to care about this second wave of extinctions. I once asked an
older colleague why Australian scientists didn't act to save such
beautiful and unique creatures - which would not have been hard to do,
as many similar species breed prolifically in captivity. He replied that
in the age of Watson and Crick and nuclear power, no Australian
researcher worth his salt wanted to stay in the country. Cambridge and
Harvard were where the real scientific action was. And so the
extinctions rolled on unchallenged, depriving all Australians forever of
the joy of knowing a continent alive with its marsupial heritage.

With the third wave of extinction swelling, a generation of Australian
scientists is at last mounting a rearguard action to preserve our unique
biodiversity. But so miserable is the funding, and so immense the task,
that species are slipping away before their eyes, even in the
best-protected wildernesses. Mount Lewis, in north-east Queensland, is a
jewel in the crown of Australia's World Heritage wet tropics. It's a
place seemingly untouched by the modern world, full of ancient
rainforest life, much of it found nowhere else on Earth. If you had
taken a night-time walk through that forest a few years ago, you might
have seen a distinctive white possum with eyes like coals peering down
at you from the treetops. Known as the lemuroid possum, they are easy to
spot, for they are noisy and constantly leaping from one tree to
another. Even now you can see a dwindling number of lemuroid possums
further south, on the Atherton Tablelands, but the Mount Lewis animals
are genetically distinct, about one in five being albino.

Scientists have been studying the Mount Lewis ringtails for decades. In
the 1980s the possums were so abundant that more than one was seen per
hour of spotlighting. In the '90s they were less common; but then
suddenly, in 2005, scientists stopped seeing them. For three years there
was not a single sighting until, in early 2009, a tiny remnant
population was located. What could possibly have destroyed a creature
living in such pristine habitat?

The fate of the lemuroid possum had been predicted in 2003, when a group
of researchers used computer models to assess the impact of increasing
temperature on rainforest animals. Many species, they found, could not
tolerate even a small rise in temperature. The lemuroid ringtail was one
of the most vulnerable, being unable to tolerate temperatures above
28° Celsius for more than a few hours. The scientists predicted that
extinctions would begin to occur when the average temperature rose by
around 2°, and would pick up pace when the temperature rose by
3.6°. Because such warming was not expected until 2050 or later,
scientists believed we had decades to deal with the problem. No one,
however, anticipated the effect of extreme weather.

Researchers have now shown that short-lived heatwaves are killing
Australia's animals. After each heatwave fewer possums were spotted,
until an exceptionally hot day in 2005 brought the creature to the brink
of extinction. With more heatwaves inevitable, the white lemuroid possum
will almost certainly become extinct in the wild in the next few years.
And this is a tragedy, for the lemuroid ringtail is a truly ancient
Australian, with a fossil record going back more than 5 million years.

The white lemuroid possum is just the photogenic tip of a huge
extinction iceberg. A tiny bat, the Christmas Island pipistrelle, will
probably beat the possum to extinction. A few years ago it was abundant
on the island, but by early 2009 just 20 remained. Such is its rate of
decline that it will be extinct by the end of this year, unless the most
determined effort is made. The mountain pygmy-possum is an ancient
Australian with a fossil record going back around 20 million years, and
it's not far behind the bat in the extinction stakes. Restricted to
Australia's alpine country, its population has recently plunged by more
than 90%, prompting its 2008 listing by the International Union for the
Conservation of Nature as "critically endangered". Ominously, no one has
assessed its population since the catastrophic Victorian bushfires.
Computer modelling, though, indicates that just a 1° rise in the
average temperature will drive it to extinction; and, as temperatures
rise further, most of Australia's unique alpine habitat is likely to
follow.

Behind these species teetering on the brink are whole ecosystems in
peril, for the extinction wave that devastated southern Australia a
century ago is now sweeping the north. Around half of northern
Australia's medium-sized mammals (such as bandicoots and wallabies) have
declined in population by 90%, and most of the remainder are so poorly
studied that we have no idea how endangered they are. Three quarters of
the region's native rodents have declined catastrophically, and even
many of the smaller, more resilient species are in seemingly terminal
decline, having been found in many surveys to have diminished in
abundance by 95%. All of this has happened over the past ten to 30
years, as national parks have grown, along with environmental awareness.
While the causes remain uncertain, altered fire regimes, cats and a
changing climate are likely all playing a part.

The rusted-on climate sceptics and those who don't give a stuff about
their natural heritage argue that it's impossible to know whether a
species is extinct, or what caused a species' extinction. If that
argument fails they'll say that it doesn't matter anyway, because
species are always becoming extinct. Such deceptions are a gross insult
to scientists and, indeed, all Australians. Of course there'll always be
arguments about the cause of extinctions, and there's a slim hope that
some remnant populations have survived. But the trend is clear. We are
losing our precious native animals, and it's happening on our watch. And
it really matters. The extinctions we're seeing are stripping our
heritage from us at a rate thousands of times faster than occurred in
pre-European times, and that is leading to ever more fragile and
less-well-functioning ecosystems.

The success of groups such as the Australian Wildlife Conservancy (a
not-for-profit organisation of which I am a director), funded by
donations from ordinary Australians, shows just how out of step with
public sentiment are the sceptics. Without the work of the AWC, species
such as the woylie and the Shark Bay mouse would be on the verge of
extinction today, and the group's work in northern Australia is turning
the extinction tide wherever it manages land. But without a concerted
national effort, more extinctions are inevitable.

If the Australian government was at all serious about climate-change
mitigation, it would be pumping millions of dollars into surveys and
captive-breeding programs for the most critically endangered species.
Instead, we see business as usual: mouthed concern, but no meaningful
action to deal with the consequences of our coal burning. Without doubt,
climate change is only one factor at work, but no one can gainsay that
it's a deadly serious one, with computer models indicating that we face
losing three out of five species on Earth to global warming if the
worst-case scenario eventuates.

What should we think of an Australia that pours $42 billion into a brown
economic-stimulus package to save a faltering economy, yet stands by
with hands in pockets as one species after another slides towards
extinction? Any thinking person would look on such short-sightedness
with disgust. We'll have our say again soon, most likely in 2010, and if
enough Australians make themselves heard, one day we just might be led
by a government that really cares about this country - animals and all -
in the way it deserves.

The link is http://www.themonthly.com.au/tm/node/1543
<http://www.themonthly.com.au/tm/node/1543>


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