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Subject: Reuters-Mass Species Extinctions Predicted - Unless...
Mass Species Extinctions Predicted - Unless...

It doesn't take a close encounter with a comet to wipe out 40 percent of
the species on earth. Chainsaws and bulldozers can do the job just as
well.

Humanity's destruction of tropical habitat for agriculture, logging and
other development has inflated earth's normal background extinction rate
by as much as 1,000 times, said Stuart Pimm, a senior research scientist
at the Center for Environmental Research and Conservation.

"This constitutes by far and away our greatest impact on the planet,
both today and for millions of years to come," Pimm said. "Species
extinction is irreversible. Jurassic Park is just a movie."

In an article published in the 24 February issue of Nature entitled
"Extinction by numbers," Pimm and co-author Peter Raven of the Missouri
Botanical Garden examine the potential extinction scenarios for the 21st
Century. The outlook they present is sobering.

Of an estimated 7 million plant and animal species on earth, about 85
percent live on land with about two-thirds of them in the tropics,
mostly the rainforests. Prior to modern human influence, these forests
covered approximately 16 million square kilometers. Today about 8
million remain.

The current rate of forest loss is about 1 million square kilometers
every 5 to 10 years and accelerating, with several times that area being
damaged by fires and selective logging.

At this pace, the tropical forests will be gone well before the end of
the century, along with over half of all earth's species. And on closer
inspection, the picture only gets worse.

It turns out that 30 to 50 percent of all plant, amphibian, reptile,
bird and mammal species are found in just 25 biodiversity "hotspots"
that comprise less than 2 percent of earth's ice-free land surface.
Seventeen of these hotspots are tropical forest areas where only 12
percent of the original habitat remains.

Pimm's analysis indicates that about one-fifth of the species in these
17 areas are either already gone, or on the verge of extinction. Barring
immediate action, within 10 years only those areas already protected
from development will remain, with about 40 percent of the species lost
forever.

Luckily the numbers also reveal a ray of hope, if only we heed the
warning, Pimm said.

The relationship between habitat loss and extinction is nonlinear.
Initial destruction of a habitat squeezes most tenant species into
shrinking remnants of their original territory, driving to extinction
only those whose highly restricted ranges are entirely consumed.

Eventually, though, as the remaining habitat shrinks to a small fraction
of its former size, the rate of extinction accelerates rapidly and peaks
before dwindling off as the final surviving species succumb.

While that sounds grim, it also means that the actual extinction impact
of tropical habitat loss thus far has been relatively minor. Although
the  rainforests are already half gone, about 85 percent of their
species remain.  Thus, strong conservation steps taken now could greatly
reduce the tropical forest extinction rate, which otherwise will peak at
nearly 50,000 species per one million by mid-century, Pimm said.

Moreover, by focusing our immediate conservation efforts on the hotspot
areas at greatest risk, we can achieve an enormous improvement in the
extinction outlook very quickly, even though broad scale conservation
will still be necessary to preserve long-term biodiversity, Pimm said.

The last great global extinction happened about 65 million years ago
when about 40 percent of all the species on earth, including the
dinosaurs, were  wiped out. A widely held theory attributes that event
to a catastrophic comet impact, which clogged the atmosphere with dust
that blotted out the sun.

It took about 10 million years for the planet to recover from that loss
of biodiversity, although the assemblage of species, of course, ended up
very different, Pimm said.

"Our actions today, for better or worse, will continue to impact the
earth for millions of years to come," Pimm said. "Unless we take
immediate and efficient steps to curb the rate of tropical habitat loss,
particularly in the hotspot areas, scientists 10 million years hence
will view the 21st Century as we do the end of the Cretaceous -- as a
major extinction catastrophe." 




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