Human Population And The Future Of Biodiversity, UCS

Excerpt: For the first time, human activities are affecting species of all
types and habits, at all points of the globe, and pushing many toward
extinction. Scientists project that at least half of all living species
could ultimately disappear due to habitat loss alone, creating a mass
extinction on a scale comparable to those that have ended past geologic
eras.

Apart from habitat loss, other agents of human-caused extinction are now at
work. Even more species could disappear as a result of pollution,
overhunting, overfishing and inadvertent introduction of exotic species into
weakened ecosystems. Hanging over the future of all life is the puzzle of
how global climate will change in coming centuries as a result of human
influences, and how these changes will affect ecosystems and the species
they support.

Not all species are at risk, however. Evolution is resilient. A small
percentage of species�from pigeons, to weeds, to microbial parasites�have
proliferated beyond their pre-human numbers or ranges. Rapidly evolving
pests and disease-causing organisms could swell their ranks. Humanity
itself, with more than 30 times the population density it ever could have
achieved without agriculture, now appears to have become the central
organizing reality around which non-human life will evolve.
 see: www.comdig.de
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