Richard Mabey wrote [Independent on Sunday]

"Last summer, at a stroke, the bee orchids went from our lane. Two summers 
of florid grass growth brought the verge-cutters out early, before the 
orchids flower and seed, and we won't any longer see those fabulous, 
chimerical blooms, with their velvet bodies and sculpted pink wings, just 
an amble away...

There are bee orchids just a mile away, round a patch of dry waste ground 
used for bike scrambles...

Yet the neighbourliness of our local patch is something that can't be 
replaced. For me, settling down in a new habitat in Norfolk, they completed 
a circle opened up one June day half a lifetime ago, when I saw my first on 
a picnic in the Chilterns, and knew that I had gone through some subtle 
graduation in the rites of botany. In a less dramatic way, their passing is 
like a stitch dropped, part of a great unravelling. But such a local 
passing will bother only us locals. Bee orchids may be part of that 
mysterious portmanteau concept "biodiversity" but are not likely to figure 
on any official Action Plans. They are widespread, unpredictable, and some 
summers - the final damnation - verge on the common. Government targets, 
population graphs, earmarked subsidies won't work in situations like this.

The diversity of living forms is what helps the world to survive. It is 
life's buffer against environmental change, a flush of wild cards. Letting 
it wither amounts to a collective suicide bid. But it won't "work" if we 
try to save it as a collection of museum pieces, as isolated 
"representative" habitats, "back-from-the brink" species, "minimal 
sustainable populations". A couple of thousand hectares of heathland 
restored, bittern numbers doubled is a start. But as targets they represent 
a scenario of despair. Biodiversity does not begin to decline when a 
species becomes extinct. It starts with the erosion of the common, with the 
vanishing of a flower from the back lane. It involves the closing-down of 
personal experiences, the attrition of the most basic elements of 
intricate, mutually dependent networks. Shouldn't we be more generous, less 
dogmatic about what is important, less reliant on endangerment as a trigger 
for action? What about the truly common species, the backbone of natural - 
and cultural - systems? What are we doing to safeguard oceanic plankton, 
and the mycorrhizal fungi on which most trees depend?

Shouldn't we be striving to save cowslips, to ensure that the blackbird's 
song never becomes a folk-memory forever mummified on a compact disc? We 
seem to respond to buzzwords, so alongside biodiversity, let us hope for 
some homegrown bioluxuriance, not just a tabulated series of vegetation 
types and "typical" creatures gathered into biological ghettos. The one 
solid argument for the preservation of species is an ethical one: they are 
important in their own right, as part of the intricacy of life. And for 
them to be a part of that web means they must flourish throughout it. That 
means where we live. If on the way we can enjoy our common inheritance - 
celebrate the extravagant, superfluous mimicry of the self-pollinating bee 
orchid - then so much the better."

article URL :

http://www.redorbit.com/news/science/667948/it_begins_with_the_bee_orchid_down_our_lane_/index.html?source=r_science

*********
Regards,

VB


_______________________________________________
the OrchidGuide Digest (OGD)
[email protected]
http://orchidguide.com/mailman/listinfo/orchids_orchidguide.com

Reply via email to