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20/10/08 | Posted by breaking wave
We are living in the age of the 6th mass extinction. The previous five were all the result of some geological/ cosmic event or events, often with an associated climate change. The current extinction is different - it has a biotic cause. That biotic cause is the human species and we are on track for matching up to previous mass extinctions.
What have we done to have such a profound action on the biodiversity of our planet?

We have made extinct through our own deliberate actions –
The passenger pigeon was blasted out of the sky for food or entertainment; its roosts were raided. Flocks of hundreds of thousands or even millions were gone by the early 1900s, with a few sad individuals lingering as a witness to the end of their species.
We have made extinct through ignorance -
From early in their history, humans have loved to move from place to place and as they have done so they have often taken other species with them – some accidentally & some deliberately. Throughout the world these animals and plants have eaten or pushed out the native species.
We have made extinct through negligence and weakness -
As our species has grown in number we have converted enormous areas of the world to agriculture and urbanisation. We have destroyed further habitats to extract resources for food, industry, construction, and industry. We have over-exploited many species – great fisheries of the past have disappeared.
We have destroyed what we did not know
Only about 1.5 million species have been identified. Estimates of total species numbers are mainly in the range of 5-15 million. Most of these are in tropical forests we are clearing or oceans we are polluting and depleting. We have not even been able to name these fellow-passengers on Earth; we have not been able to know, cherish, or use them.
Previous mass extinctions have often been linked to climate change ……..and in the current man-induced extinction event we are producing a profound change in climate. This alone is likely to cause the extinction of many species, but its effects are magnified by our other actions. The natural reaction of a species to a change in climate is to move, to follow the climate to which it is best adapted. But most species cannot move across a hostile habitat or man-made barriers. In much of the world there are now isolated areas of refuge for wildlife, in habitats doomed to change as the climate changes.
We have followed too much the devices and desires of our own hearts,
We have offended against your holy laws,
We have left undone those things which we ought to have done,
And we have done those things which we ought not to have done
Thanks to Bumbling Bee for this post - a more extensive version can be found in the wiki under Extinctions
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#1. By Radiant Warrior on October 22, 2008
Sadly the nature of humankind seems to be that only when facing suffering or even extinction will we act to change. Things may need to get worse to get better? However, of all the species we possess the ability to conceptualise and change so maybe there is hope.
Encouraging one another to journey towards a life more in tune with the earth.