Over the past decades human activities and experimentation with
nature has been responsible for rapidly diminishing the diversity
of life forms on this planet. Each species lost is a storehouse
of environmental knowledge selected for over millions of years.
The exploding sciences of biomimicry, bioengineering, and genetic manipulation highlight the enormous potential a single species may have in helping humanity create a healthier, more sustainable interaction with our environment through improvements to medicines, food production, nutrition, technologies, and resilient ecosystems.
A conservative estimate is that well over a hundred species a day are going extinct, with the rate of disappearing species accelerating as natural habitats shrink, fragment, and degrade and commercial exploitation of vulnerable species escalates. The loss of species is irreversible and the loss of old-growth natural habitats irretrievable within centuries. The fewer the species remaining on this planet, the more tenuous our own existence.
EO Wilson rightly warns that our destruction of the Earth’s biodiversity will be the thing that future generations will least forgive us for.
What can we do?
A good start is to fully shut down the international trade in wildlife, protect all remaining natural habitats, from rainforests to untrawled seafloors, and begin to restore watersheds by removing dams and protecting headwater and riverbank vegetation, putting an end to all forms of nature experimentation like Geoengineering, genetic manipulation of organisms and plants etc, reducing our carbon foot prints and enacting laws restricting individuals and corporations from indiscriminating dumping of refuse and liquid waste into our water bodies and all around our environment .
In adapting to all these measures our biodiversity will be preserved and conserved to sustain humanity once again.
The exploding sciences of biomimicry, bioengineering, and genetic manipulation highlight the enormous potential a single species may have in helping humanity create a healthier, more sustainable interaction with our environment through improvements to medicines, food production, nutrition, technologies, and resilient ecosystems.
A conservative estimate is that well over a hundred species a day are going extinct, with the rate of disappearing species accelerating as natural habitats shrink, fragment, and degrade and commercial exploitation of vulnerable species escalates. The loss of species is irreversible and the loss of old-growth natural habitats irretrievable within centuries. The fewer the species remaining on this planet, the more tenuous our own existence.
EO Wilson rightly warns that our destruction of the Earth’s biodiversity will be the thing that future generations will least forgive us for.
What can we do?
A good start is to fully shut down the international trade in wildlife, protect all remaining natural habitats, from rainforests to untrawled seafloors, and begin to restore watersheds by removing dams and protecting headwater and riverbank vegetation, putting an end to all forms of nature experimentation like Geoengineering, genetic manipulation of organisms and plants etc, reducing our carbon foot prints and enacting laws restricting individuals and corporations from indiscriminating dumping of refuse and liquid waste into our water bodies and all around our environment .
In adapting to all these measures our biodiversity will be preserved and conserved to sustain humanity once again.
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