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A dream came true: Half grown Siberian tiger in the snow

Started Mar 4, 2017 | Photos
howardfuhrman Veteran Member • Posts: 4,153
Re: A dream came true: Half grown Siberian tiger in the snow

Great photos.

Jorginho Forum Pro • Posts: 15,370
Re: Can we trust biology ecology?
2

Creatures become extinct because they are no longer fit enough to survive. it is irrelevant whether it is us or anything else: 99.9% of all creatures that have ever lived became extinct. No one misses the Shortfaced bear, the cave lion, the mamuth, megaceros etcetc.

We only appear to miss what we have lost and loved. While we lost species for sure recently on a global scale, we have won a lot of diversity on a regional scale. It is a human trait to adhere a lot of value to what is rare. Whether it is gold, a special kind of food or an animal. What is abundant doesn't count and "too" abundant and it is a pest.

In reality some species are at the end of the line and no longer fit to survive whereas others are doing much better because of the changes in their surroundings. Some have found new homes via human dispersal and also are doing very well.

The Siberian tiger supresses wolvenumbers significantly. Wherever human predation of tigers diminshes their numbers, wolves start to thrive. Wherever wolves enter, coyotes disappear. So in this case one takes the place of the other. Some things change. Larger ungulates have no problem with a coyote, but a pack of wolves is a serious danger. So they are more weary, less productive and forests start to grow...or prairie is lost...Whatever you like.

Change is a constant in the Universe. We will lose friends, species etc. I am human too an do not like it but I then realise that there is no good or bad reason for it. It is just the way it is. Sooner or later that tiger will become extinct. we probably too.

As it is, the tiger is just not competitive enough. It does not need to become extinct if it would be more clever etc. Foxes, raccons, wolves, bears, pigs, coyotes etc: they do well with humans around.

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erichK Veteran Member • Posts: 6,661
WE are changing the environment.
4

Jorginho wrote:

Creatures become extinct because they are no longer fit enough to survive. it is irrelevant whether it is us or anything else: 99.9% of all creatures that have ever lived became extinct. No one misses the Shortfaced bear, the cave lion, the mamuth, megaceros etcetc.

We only appear to miss what we have lost and loved. While we lost species for sure recently on a global scale, we have won a lot of diversity on a regional scale. It is a human trait to adhere a lot of value to what is rare. Whether it is gold, a special kind of food or an animal. What is abundant doesn't count and "too" abundant and it is a pest.

In reality some species are at the end of the line and no longer fit to survive whereas others are doing much better because of the changes in their surroundings. Some have found new homes via human dispersal and also are doing very well.

The Siberian tiger supresses wolvenumbers significantly. Wherever human predation of tigers diminshes their numbers, wolves start to thrive. Wherever wolves enter, coyotes disappear. So in this case one takes the place of the other. Some things change. Larger ungulates have no problem with a coyote, but a pack of wolves is a serious danger. So they are more weary, less productive and forests start to grow...or prairie is lost...Whatever you like.

Change is a constant in the Universe. We will lose friends, species etc. I am human too an do not like it but I then realise that there is no good or bad reason for it. It is just the way it is. Sooner or later that tiger will become extinct. we probably too.

As it is, the tiger is just not competitive enough. It does not need to become extinct if it would be more clever etc. Foxes, raccons, wolves, bears, pigs, coyotes etc: they do well with humans around.

Wrong and wrongheaded. Even the mechanistic, deterministic oversimplification of Darwinism that you propound could only obtain in a closed, essentially static, system.

"It is just the way it is." Is a cop-out indeed! You are being wilfully blind to a record of human effects on the environment that go back to the beginnings of agriculture. William F Ruddiman's PLOWS, PLAGUES, AND PETROLEUM.

More importantly, you are ignoring the mountain of evidence that NOW we humans, with our destructive practices, are having major effects on the environment we share with such animals. In the particular of the Siberian Tiger, the are being slaughtered not by any natural process, but because the erectile anxieties and superstitions of aging men create a high-margin market for unscrupulous gangsters (not unlike the drug trade).

Ironically, the power of Sabine's beautiful pictures is enhanced by the reality that this species has almost been extinguished by such activity.

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erichK
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Jorginho Forum Pro • Posts: 15,370
Re: WE are changing the environment.
3

erichK wrote:

Jorginho wrote:

Creatures become extinct because they are no longer fit enough to survive. it is irrelevant whether it is us or anything else: 99.9% of all creatures that have ever lived became extinct. No one misses the Shortfaced bear, the cave lion, the mamuth, megaceros etcetc.

We only appear to miss what we have lost and loved. While we lost species for sure recently on a global scale, we have won a lot of diversity on a regional scale. It is a human trait to adhere a lot of value to what is rare. Whether it is gold, a special kind of food or an animal. What is abundant doesn't count and "too" abundant and it is a pest.

In reality some species are at the end of the line and no longer fit to survive whereas others are doing much better because of the changes in their surroundings. Some have found new homes via human dispersal and also are doing very well.

The Siberian tiger supresses wolvenumbers significantly. Wherever human predation of tigers diminshes their numbers, wolves start to thrive. Wherever wolves enter, coyotes disappear. So in this case one takes the place of the other. Some things change. Larger ungulates have no problem with a coyote, but a pack of wolves is a serious danger. So they are more weary, less productive and forests start to grow...or prairie is lost...Whatever you like.

Change is a constant in the Universe. We will lose friends, species etc. I am human too an do not like it but I then realise that there is no good or bad reason for it. It is just the way it is. Sooner or later that tiger will become extinct. we probably too.

As it is, the tiger is just not competitive enough. It does not need to become extinct if it would be more clever etc. Foxes, raccons, wolves, bears, pigs, coyotes etc: they do well with humans around.

Wrong and wrongheaded. Even the mechanistic, deterministic oversimplification of Darwinism that you propound could only obtain in a closed, essentially static, system.

No. the view of a static system also known as an ecosystem is static. Since it needs to be in some sort of balance and external forces disrupt it which according to some is fine as long as it isn't for one species doing this...

My view is a dynamic system in which things constantly changem become extinct and new species evolve at different rates. Such is demonstrably the case.

"It is just the way it is." Is a cop-out indeed!

There is no need for a cop out when you accept all moral views as equally valid. which would equate to no moral, since one could argue that in reality none can be valid. AFAIK nature has no moral, it is a human concept. You can take this concept as a reality as a human but would unable to determine which concept is the right one since it is no more a thought which seems reasonable to you, to some or many but it is not a reality nor a universal truth.
We could all agree there must be a God but it would never add a single thing to proving it actually exists. Same sort of thing.

You are being wilfully blind to a record of human effects on the environment that go back to the beginnings of agriculture. William F Ruddiman's PLOWS, PLAGUES, AND PETROLEUM.

Again; not at all. But these are all natural. For sure. Whether these changes are good or bad is again a personal stance. Suppose you do not like whatever that will become extinct: to that person it probably will be seen as "good". Someone who holds the opposite view, will say the opposite. there can be no judge other than a majority being in favour of some of the views.

More importantly, you are ignoring the mountain of evidence that NOW we humans, with our destructive practices,

There willl never be any science that can prove "destruction". Destruction is a view by humans on a certain development. We will agree that humans significantly change states of climate, ecology, biosphere etc. Sure. No climatologist will ever say, in a scientific paper, that the warming is bad, unnatural etc. it is significant and anthropogenic, each individual can determine whether it is good or bad. Arrhenius found out in 1895 that a doubling of Co2 would warm the Earth by up to 4 K. And he would love it, since it would make Sweden a nicer place to live in in his Swedish view...

are having major effects on the environment we share with such animals. In the particular of the Siberian Tiger, the are being slaughtered not by any natural process,

that is when you exclude humans as being part of nature. Now may be you believe in metaphysics and some God like creature that created humans as this and ALL other animals like that. If not: humans are a species that have very significant effects on their surroundings in a new way. But nothing supernatural about them. We have developped on earth out of other primates.

I think your morals are dictating over your slogic here. Also it seems you think i have no personal feelings or stance on this development. I do. But I do not think my view are the truth at all. A look at our Earth and species shows our morals are different in time and space and time and time again many have thought their morals must be the right ones. I do not think I agree. I have seen the outcome than and now, just look at the massslaughter of some species because they are considered not in the right place on planet Earth...Very nice.

but because the erectile anxieties and superstitions of aging men create a high-margin market for unscrupulous gangsters (not unlike the drug trade).

Ironically, the power of Sabine's beautiful pictures is enhanced by the reality that this species has almost been extinguished by such activity.

Many have gone before it. By a meteorite for instance; thousand and thousands of dinosaurs became extinct in a blink of an eye. Would you describe that as bad. a disaster? Yes, if you were a dinosaur probably. But mammals if they could be conscious of it and know what would happen many millennia after this they would see this as a fantastic miracukous gift of mother earth.

If we do not want this to happen, we must probably not teach our kids to become achievers in the way society wants us. But achievers as altruisitic beings. So we should may be give marks for sharing, caring, thinking for oneanother. Mindfulness and other forms of meditation are very capable of getting even 7 yrs olds rid of discrimination and egoitistic thoughts. Yes: this has been proven in a scientific sound way. this empathic view of kids and later people easily or ideally should spill over to all living things. Accepting reality, ourselves, others, so called errors, so called failures etc opens us up as much more empathic and understanding beings.

In stead of thinking and being focussed of being good at something like maths, writing, history, physics, Me I me I I me me me me I....We should start thinking about us, we, them, you and me as a part of all of us. Would also be nice if people would be less judgemental, a trait moralism seems to introduce invariably with all sorts of outcomes not too healthy fdor others in extreme cases...

Spending money subsidising nature with a natural movement in another direction, like conservation in Europe tends to want to conserve vast amounts of heath and pastures, is mostly making "nature" dependent on economics.....Acceptance of change and letting go seems a far more productive thing todo. We would get woods. May be would could spend money to let kids meditate and get good at becoming social and empathic beings...

The altruist revolution is a nice documentary to start with, even though I dislike the title. I think that is the way forward for our species, but that is just me.

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TN Args
TN Args Forum Pro • Posts: 10,687
Re: WE are changing the environment.
4

Jorginho wrote:

erichK wrote:

Jorginho wrote:

Creatures become extinct because they are no longer fit enough to survive. it is irrelevant whether it is us or anything else: 99.9% of all creatures that have ever lived became extinct. No one misses the Shortfaced bear, the cave lion, the mamuth, megaceros etcetc.

We only appear to miss what we have lost and loved. While we lost species for sure recently on a global scale, we have won a lot of diversity on a regional scale. It is a human trait to adhere a lot of value to what is rare. Whether it is gold, a special kind of food or an animal. What is abundant doesn't count and "too" abundant and it is a pest.

In reality some species are at the end of the line and no longer fit to survive whereas others are doing much better because of the changes in their surroundings. Some have found new homes via human dispersal and also are doing very well.

The Siberian tiger supresses wolve numbers significantly. Wherever human predation of tigers diminshes their numbers, wolves start to thrive. Wherever wolves enter, coyotes disappear. So in this case one takes the place of the other. Some things change. Larger ungulates have no problem with a coyote, but a pack of wolves is a serious danger. So they are more weary, less productive and forests start to grow...or prairie is lost...Whatever you like.

Change is a constant in the Universe. We will lose friends, species etc. I am human too an do not like it but I then realise that there is no good or bad reason for it. It is just the way it is. Sooner or later that tiger will become extinct. we probably too.

As it is, the tiger is just not competitive enough. It does not need to become extinct if it would be more clever etc. Foxes, raccons, wolves, bears, pigs, coyotes etc: they do well with humans around.

Wrong and wrongheaded. Even the mechanistic, deterministic oversimplification of Darwinism that you propound could only obtain in a closed, essentially static, system.

No. the view of a static system also known as an ecosystem is static. Since it needs to be in some sort of balance and external forces disrupt it which according to some is fine as long as it isn't for one species doing this...

My view is a dynamic system in which things constantly changem become extinct and new species evolve at different rates. Such is demonstrably the case.

"It is just the way it is." Is a cop-out indeed!

There is no need for a cop out when you accept all moral views as equally valid. which would equate to no moral, since one could argue that in reality none can be valid. AFAIK nature has no moral, it is a human concept. You can take this concept as a reality as a human but would unable to determine which concept is the right one since it is no more a thought which seems reasonable to you, to some or many but it is not a reality nor a universal truth.
We could all agree there must be a God but it would never add a single thing to proving it actually exists. Same sort of thing.

You are being wilfully blind to a record of human effects on the environment that go back to the beginnings of agriculture. William F Ruddiman's PLOWS, PLAGUES, AND PETROLEUM.

Again; not at all. But these are all natural. For sure. Whether these changes are good or bad is again a personal stance. Suppose you do not like whatever that will become extinct: to that person it probably will be seen as "good". Someone who holds the opposite view, will say the opposite. there can be no judge other than a majority being in favour of some of the views.

More importantly, you are ignoring the mountain of evidence that NOW we humans, with our destructive practices,

There willl never be any science that can prove "destruction". Destruction is a view by humans on a certain development. We will agree that humans significantly change states of climate, ecology, biosphere etc. Sure. No climatologist will ever say, in a scientific paper, that the warming is bad, unnatural etc. it is significant and anthropogenic, each individual can determine whether it is good or bad. Arrhenius found out in 1895 that a doubling of Co2 would warm the Earth by up to 4 K. And he would love it, since it would make Sweden a nicer place to live in in his Swedish view...

Have a read of this.

An ecosystem that naturally has individual lives and whole species arising and falling is fine, and the pace is such that adaptations can occur in some instances and not in others. An evolutionary pace. One day, the conditions of existence will eliminate it all, if not earlier then, ultimately, when the sun moves through its own life cycle.

But when one part of that system becomes completely dominant, reproduces rampantly to plague proportions, overwhelms all other life (the 'background' species extinction rate is 1 to 5 species per year, but today it is 1,000 to 10,000 times that rate), greatly accelerates climate changes on a planetary scale, then adaptation becomes impossible and the system is on course to abrupt collapse.

To argue 'that's okay too' is essentially a death wish. Essentially the same as willingly being part of the evil monster of so many morality tales, set on course to destroy the planet.

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erichK Veteran Member • Posts: 6,661
Re: WE are changing the environment.
2

TN Args wrote:

Have a read of this.

An ecosystem that naturally has individual lives and whole species arising and falling is fine, and the pace is such that adaptations can occur in some instances and not in others. An evolutionary pace. One day, the conditions of existence will eliminate it all, if not earlier then, ultimately, when the sun moves through its own life cycle.

But when one part of that system becomes completely dominant, reproduces rampantly to plague proportions, overwhelms all other life (the 'background' species extinction rate is 1 to 5 species per year, but today it is 1,000 to 10,000 times that rate), greatly accelerates climate changes on a planetary scale, then adaptation becomes impossible and the system is on course to abrupt collapse.

To argue 'that's okay too' is essentially a death wish. Essentially the same as willingly being part of the evil monster of so many morality tales, set on course to destroy the planet.

Well said.  The article makes the very simply point that human activity has become  the - major driver of cataclysmically-rapid environmental disruption that is accelerating because we are continue to feed major positive feedback processes (global warming, ocean acidification,  etc)

To sit back and do nothing, insisting that these are inevitable, even as one continues to contribute  to them is not just immoral, it is, in the not-very-long-run, suicidal.

In the case of the Siberian Tiger, there are simpler solutions: stamping out the bizarre trade in Tiger body parts by really going after the customers as well as the poachers and supply chain.

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erichK
saskatoon, canada
Photography is a small voice, at best, but sometimes one photograph, or a group of them, can lure our sense of awareness.
- W. Eugene Smith, Dec 30, 1918 to Oct 15, 1978.
http://erichk.zenfolio.com/
http://www.fototime.com/inv/7F3D846BCD301F3
underwater photos:
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Bhushan Barve
Bhushan Barve Regular Member • Posts: 167
Re: A dream came true: Half grown Siberian tiger in the snow

This is really nice!

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Jorginho Forum Pro • Posts: 15,370
Re: WE are changing the environment.

erichK wrote:

TN Args wrote:

Have a read of this.

An ecosystem that naturally has individual lives and whole species arising and falling is fine, and the pace is such that adaptations can occur in some instances and not in others. An evolutionary pace. One day, the conditions of existence will eliminate it all, if not earlier then, ultimately, when the sun moves through its own life cycle.

But when one part of that system becomes completely dominant, reproduces rampantly to plague proportions, overwhelms all other life (the 'background' species extinction rate is 1 to 5 species per year, but today it is 1,000 to 10,000 times that rate), greatly accelerates climate changes on a planetary scale, then adaptation becomes impossible and the system is on course to abrupt collapse.

To argue 'that's okay too' is essentially a death wish. Essentially the same as willingly being part of the evil monster of so many morality tales, set on course to destroy the planet.

Well said. The article makes the very simply point that human activity has become the - major driver of cataclysmically-rapid environmental disruption that is accelerating because we are continue to feed major positive feedback processes (global warming, ocean acidification, etc)

Not a single scientist can prove a cataclysm, disruption or that any development is bad.
Anyone can write a book btw. Climate change deniers are good at it since they cannot write papers that will pass peerreviewing since it lacks facts to prove their point.

Many papers on ecology would face the same faith if it weren't infected by an ideology that dictates what is right or wrong on preferences rather than facts.

Show me one peerreviewed paper on climatology that uses valueladen wording. Won't be there because what we think about a proven development is personal and never scientific for scientists cannot prove something is bad or good. We need to decide. All of us.

To sit back and do nothing, insisting that these are inevitable, even as one continues to contribute to them is not just immoral, it is, in the not-very-long-run, suicidal.

Well 200 years ago people would agree in the same vain that homosexuality is unnatural, abberation and amoral. Would you agree with that stance?

The iceage decimates species big time. In Europe especially after each iceage our flora is less abundant. We used to have Tsuga and Pseudotsuga species, we only have one Picea species left with a remnant of another one (omorika).

Is it the right thing to halt an iceage to prevent our own extinction, to prevent other extinctions? What is the consistent moral here of you.
Another point: we live in the Anthropocene. The age of Homo sapiens sapiens, just like we had the age of the dinosaurs for over 100 million years btw. Now what would happen if we would become extinct tomorrow to all other species on the world, to climate change? Climate would continue to warm up for about 50 years and then slowly start to cool down. Some species that had too few members left would still vanish, but the rate of extinctions would go down abruptly.
Since there is no sign at all of less signfiicant influence of humans globally now nor in the following decades, wouldn't it be good if we became extinct sooner than later??
Also this all is not exactly news, CLub of Rome is about 50 years ago.....so those in charge, which we chose mostly via our votes, care about..economy more...

So: should we just not disappear for the greater good?

What are your morals on this?

In the case of the Siberian Tiger, there are simpler solutions: stamping out the bizarre trade in Tiger body parts by really going after the customers as well as the poachers and supply chain.

if it was so simple it would already be a fact. It is not so simple it seems...We should just stamp out drugs...Right: we can't even keep 'em out of prison, a very controlled, confined area. But we cannot.

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yahoo2u
yahoo2u Contributing Member • Posts: 715
Re: A dream came true: Half grown Siberian tiger in the snow

Brill.

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ShatteredSky
ShatteredSky Senior Member • Posts: 2,065
Re: Can we trust biology ecology?

Jorginho wrote:

A large part of the feared mass extinction hinges on two factors:- Rapid global warming, whichis undisputed and scientific sound proven. Climatologists in their papers are clear about what they do and don't know

Agreed.

- Habitatloss (which is more difficult to prove even if it seems so selfevident)

There is no doubt about habitat loss. But let us not forget that at least in Middle Europe the diversity is higher due to the patchwork of agricultural, pastural, forest etc. land. That is the reason why there are initiatives to preserve all these aspects. Problem here was rather the creation of large monocultural land.

- Invasive species (apart from islands and islandlike habitats there is zero proof for that).

I think that one problem here is that there research is very manpower-hungry, and thus not well-financed in our time of ratings and reducing results to simple (black and white) numbers. I published three short records of non-indigenous species in the Mediterranean, and got a short glimpse about the huge problem of quantifying and verifying the data.

BUT, I have to agree that there is a constant change anyway, so we might just see this a s a global experiment playing before our eyes. With our influence on some of the factors we however seem to accelerate some parts of the issue. I think the subliminal fear is that in accelerating species extinction and climatic shifts we ourselves are possibly in danger (at least part of us) in being wiped out. As you have always to point out: we do not have the capacity to destroy the planet (yet), and the biosphere readily bounced back after all of the past (and the big five) waves of extinction.

You might also say that there are areas like the eastern Mediterranean that since the Messinian salinity crisis is still below its “normal" diversity, with some of the species introduced vie the Suez Canal and/or ballast water/aquarium "escapes" now settling in open or still not fully used niches. But there is no consensus how much any of these species influences others or "destroys" / occupies habitats (some algae come to mind).

Regards

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ShatteredSky
ShatteredSky Senior Member • Posts: 2,065
Excellent ! [nt]
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Gimli son of Gloin
Gimli son of Gloin Forum Member • Posts: 55
Re: A dream came true: Half grown Siberian tiger in the snow

Marvellous cat.

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Evidently we look so much alike that your desire to make an incurable dent in my hat must be excused.

Jorginho Forum Pro • Posts: 15,370
Re: Can we trust biology ecology?

ShatteredSky wrote:

Jorginho wrote:

A large part of the feared mass extinction hinges on two factors:- Rapid global warming, whichis undisputed and scientific sound proven. Climatologists in their papers are clear about what they do and don't know

Agreed.

- Habitatloss (which is more difficult to prove even if it seems so selfevident)

There is no doubt about habitat loss. But let us not forget that at least in Middle Europe the diversity is higher due to the patchwork of agricultural, pastural, forest etc. land. That is the reason why there are initiatives to preserve all these aspects. Problem here was rather the creation of large monocultural land.

Well this is about the worst thing possible we can do. This patchwork costed nothing, it was natural development based on changed behaviour (landuse) of Homo sapiens partly hand in hand with the introduction of some species (rabbits which originate from Iberia spread by the romans apparantly and actively kill seedlings systematically since they not like forests).

This anthropogenic landscape of course changed habitats on an almost continental wide scale. But humans changed their ways. So alpine pastures now become colonised by what once was there: Abies alba. Which now is cut back in for instance Switserland to prevent the natural succession from meadows to forrests (!!). And in NL we see Scots pine, Psuedotsuga and Betula species meeting the same end...the nonnative rabbit is now cherished as the gardener of the Dutch dunes 'cause god forbids they might turn into a forest.
The basic reason for this is what it virtually always is when it comes to nature: the only thing that rules all is not biodiversity (this is even countering it). it is preference for the old over the new. Conservation indeed is extremely conservative. There are very clear xenophobic traits and what most of these people despise in cultural they apply 1:1 when it comes to nature.
Innature one thing counts: not where you are from, nature is not patriotic, nationalistic, xenophobe or racist at all. It is open to everyone that can make a living in some place.
It has been like this for 1 billion or more years and it worked fine without us. Mass echanges are nothing new; when land or seabridges formed there was a mass exchange and very rapid ones are known (like a prehistoric horse from the USA entering Iberia in a matter of a few years). There is no indication that such exchanges has led to a loss in biodiversity (I think James Brown has reseached this).

So,.,Europe and its patchwork of meadows, some forests etc. We are not talking about some land here in there, in Iberia alone we are talking about 125.000 km2 that they want to be managed that way. That is 1/5th of the peninsula. I think gouvernments like this for another reason: vast areas become unihabitable because too few people sustain the villages and small towns. Just look at places like Beja in Portugal and loads of others: the numbers took a downturn somewhere in the1960s and 70s. My manager is involved in such projects in Germany where similar things happen.
This whole project, I suspect is a way toi subsidise people to stay there. But there is no real economic motor behind it.

So this landscape, which was selfsustained due to the natural behaviour of mankind, can no longer sustain itself without its keystone species (us). It would also never came to life without us,,,,

Now the to my mind very logical and better alternative is letting those vast areas be. so it can sustain itself, but also it can evolve and adapt to climate change. it is not depending on any money at all. it depends on the acceptance of change in people to let nature take its coarse. Butr precisely those that many people see as the ones who love the natural world are there to prevent exactly this to happen.

Their reason is the value they attach to historical compostions and almost exclusively use this asa guideline. And so this landscape lacks the flexibility to adapt to the now ever changing current environment.

when we look at how species move all over the world 98% is moving poleward, whereas 2% is either static or moving towards the equator. this simply means that species ranges change. In Iberia a rise of average summertemperatures is expected to reach 8K in 2100. Which is what we can expect on continents: a more rapid warming than average (counterbalanced by a more modest rsie over the oceans). Which of the current species will survive in such warmer climates?? what use it is to try to freeze landscapes in times of such unprecedented change (for most of these species)?

On top of that: how does this ensure maximum biodiversity. Whenever I mention that local diversity in almost any place in the world has sharply risen, rather than declined due to human dispersal of species almost every ecologist.conservatiobnalist discards this as worldwide the spread of species has lead to a small fall in species numbers (never on continenets though). But now apparantly we must look at local diversity. Why? This costs biodiversity more likely.

The problem is that this money, which we need time and time again is not spend in biodiverse or and vulnerable hotspots which can be found in the tropics. there are by far more species per km2 in an Indonesian or Congolese rainforest than anywhere in the temperate zone.

African parks allow hunters to shoot all kinds of wildlife because otherwise these park cease to be. Why is money put by the billions in europe with not one proven extinction prevented, when we can prevent it with that money in Indonesia and other biodiverse parts fo the world?
Or indeed the Siberian tiger...?

Also that money is not spend on a worldwide driver of species loss: curb climate change.

People who say they like nature in this case want a garden and hire gardeners to keep that place in some idealistic state. How sensible is it to make a landscape over vast stretches of land depending on humans? On economy?

this is completely beyond me. The natural selfsustaining state of europe is no longer that anthropgenic one, we shoud and could rejoice; for christ sake there is a place where the population goes down and nature can take its course again but nooo....now we need human interference constantly? Directly or indirectly by introducing large mowing machines like Highland cattle and the like? and then...wolves return, decimating the ungulates. and with them bears and lynx, Jackall is already in The Netherlands again too. those mowing machines will no longer be able to doas they please. We have seen this in Yellowstone where the return of the wolf gave way to Aspen regeneration. Prarie becoming a forest again.

why not let Brazil have its own seminatural (anhtropogenic) landscape by cutting down its forrest. I am quite sure some species willl thrive and when a new balance is found there, we will have a tropical agricultural landscape. why shouldn't they when we allowed ourselves to this in the past for OUR economy and refuse a natural state to return and at the same time deny them their economical growth at the expense of the natural landscape?

- Invasive species (apart from islands and islandlike habitats there is zero proof for that).

I think that one problem here is that there research is very manpower-hungry, and thus not well-financed in our time of ratings and reducing results to simple (black and white) numbers. I published three short records of non-indigenous species in the Mediterranean, and got a short glimpse about the huge problem of quantifying and verifying the data.

non indigenous to what? To a place based on history? Many species, like sitka spruce, tsuga heterophylla, American oak, prunus serotina are perfectly native to the NW european climate. Currently. I have seen how tsuga and sitka spruce, but also Psuedotsuga menziesii are prolific over here. In some Sitka spruce forests the amount of ferns (amount and also species richness) is unparallelled by any so called native forests. I have been in these forests and they are very diverse and resemble the NW Pacific ones a lot (according to research).

BUT, I have to agree that there is a constant change anyway, so we might just see this a s a global experiment playing before our eyes.

Well it is not an experiment. Experiments are intentional. It is to my mind a very natural evolutiuon: Human are very good in dipsersing things unintentionally. it is that some people dislike the outcome..And so come the double standards because there is no logical reasoning behind it.
Very few humans set out to get trees and species and have them colonise a country or continent. It just happened. The exception are probably Polynesians who took plants and animals with them to various Islands to grow and more than just one...and very recently some ecologists have started experimenting with tree species in new places. I know of experiments with the torreya moving up from Florida to North carolina as well as Picea breweriana, I think Picea martinezii (Mexican spruce) and so forth. many more of such projects at least have been proposed and this of course is met with opposition from conservationalists.

But this is what I miss in ecology: there seems to be very little interest in research on novel ecosystem or may be recombinant ecosystems. usually these are considered worthless.

With our influence on some of the factors we however seem to accelerate some parts of the issue. I think the subliminal fear is that in accelerating species extinction and climatic shifts we ourselves are possibly in danger (at least part of us) in being wiped out. As you have always to point out: we do not have the capacity to destroy the planet (yet), and the biosphere readily bounced back after all of the past (and the big five) waves of extinction.

5 seemsa conservative amount, Depending on the defintion we can even come to 20 massextinctions. But yes: we are not going to destroy life and I completely agree with you: i think the driving factor behind it is our fear that we might be a species becoming extinct. Quite a few point to Easter island where something like this happened on a small (Island) scale.

You might also say that there are areas like the eastern Mediterranean that since the Messinian salinity crisis is still below its “normal" diversity, with some of the species introduced vie the Suez Canal and/or ballast water/aquarium "escapes" now settling in open or still not fully used niches. But there is no consensus how much any of these species influences others or "destroys" / occupies habitats (some algae come to mind).

Yes. And ecology is very bad in predicitng the outcome of such immigrants. Sometimes their numbers rise fast followe d by a steep decline wherafter they just become one of tghe many species in some area. I think this happened with the Argentinian ant in Texas. It became very abundant and raided other ants and they seemed to become a very significant part of at least that region. In 1989. Just 10 years or so later scientists returned. there were still Argentinian ants but they did not become as dominant as predicted or feared.

Another example is Prunus serotina. There was this forest in belgium that was in a moreless natural state because it was situated on a militairy terrain used for huge transimtters (radio, radar etc). In 1975 Prunus serotina entered this forest on its own. It was predicted to become very dominant like it became in many other forrests., In 2005 the site was revisisted. there was Prunus serotina but it was far from abundant. Just here in there...

myh wish for ecology.biology is that it returns to the scientific world and gets rid of all the values it constantly introduces, where students are infected with so they can precisely not be what they should be: unbiased gatherers of data providing sopceity witrh facts and if they can't indicate their findings are not significant hence no proof for some development etc.

Regards

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"Blue for the shattered sky"

regards.

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erichK Veteran Member • Posts: 6,661
Scientism as the ultimate cop-out!

Jorginho wrote:

ShatteredSky wrote:

myh wish for ecology.biology is that it returns to the scientific world and gets rid of all the values it constantly introduces, where students are infected with so they can precisely not be what they should be: unbiased gatherers of data providing sopceity witrh facts and if they can't indicate their findings are not significant hence no proof for some development etc.

Regards

regards.

My wish - and I'm sure it is one that most thinking people share - is that the endless prevaricators that use appeals to "science" and to "objectivity" to delay effective action - as they long did with smoking, then second hand smoke, then the ozone hole and lake acidification, now global warming, species extinction finally shut their mouths, open their eyes, and recognize the realities that are happening all around us.

In 1976, I heard Aileen Smith and doctors and scientists familiar with the Minimata atrocity decry the signs of similar mercury poisoning at the Grassy Narrows reserve. Ontario government "Scientists" and "researchers" kept finding ways of raising doubts about the lethal concentrations and hypothesizing Rube Goldberg "natural" processes.  Last year, an ex-employee of the pulp mill upstream testified to being directed to dump and burry dozens of barrels.   Even after that Government "scientists" spun new evasions until independent agencies, hired by the reserve, finally confirmed what the levels are.

"Scientists" and the "need for further research" and appeals to natural processes have managed to delay action for four decades and likely contribute to neural damage of more than a generation.

There will always be some doubts about ultimate causes, about intricate dynamic mechanisms, about the interaction of complex systems and there will always be some who prefer to ponder and debate them.  But there also come a time to act.

erichK
saskatoon, canada
Photography is a small voice, at best, but sometimes one photograph, or a group of them, can lure our sense of awareness.
- W. Eugene Smith, Dec 30, 1918 to Oct 15, 1978.
http://erichk.zenfolio.com/
http://www.fototime.com/inv/7F3D846BCD301F3
underwater photos:
http://www.scubaboard.com/gallery/showgallery.php/cat/500/ppuser/5567

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Jorginho Forum Pro • Posts: 15,370
More morality

erichK wrote:

Jorginho wrote:

ShatteredSky wrote:

myh wish for ecology.biology is that it returns to the scientific world and gets rid of all the values it constantly introduces, where students are infected with so they can precisely not be what they should be: unbiased gatherers of data providing sopceity witrh facts and if they can't indicate their findings are not significant hence no proof for some development etc.

Regards

regards.

My wish - and I'm sure it is one that most thinking people share -

I am sure most people would have agreed with the killling of homosexuals at various points in time for them being unnatural, I am also very sure that in many points in time and place virtually all would agree there is a God and its laws as layed down in some book ar morally right and should be applied. That all doesn;t make it true.

is that the endless prevaricators that use appeals to "science" and to "objectivity" to delay effective action

You got this backwards. There is no place for morals in science period. Science can feed opinions, our morality can and scientific findings might even cause a conflict between fact on one hand and our morals on the others.

So yes: science can only provide facts. Not opinions, cannot tell us what we SHOULD do but can tell us what we could do. It is here where ecology regulart fails.

Now about the morality here. I think we both agree largely that our prefered world would be one with much more space for other species than just humans and that global warming is countered by appropriate action. I think we both agree that economics cannot be the determing factor at all here ideally. Well in my mind just not.

The fact of the matter is that a majority of the population moreless agrees with this stance, even in the USA where misinformation about AGW is constantly regurgetated by nonscientists 65% of the people are worried about AGW. The misinformation is there to try to make them think otherwise but the majority knows it is happening and why.

There is however no action taken there and frankly not to any degree to curb GHG emissions because politicians and media have other goals. Media need to sell and therefor come with stories that frighten us but do no make us responsible. So others are threatening us and we are in mortal danger because some ill equiped terrorists can kill a few people here in there (far less than cars do or in the USA: American citizens kill eachother). So our atttention is drawn to these non issues which we btw have caused ourselves. We know why that is: oil. Those are the biggest companies we have: oil companies. We go to war in the ME for oil and we won't take measures against CO2 because of this.

Now the morality is a problem for many politicians and so is freedom of speech. They know that if WE know the truth about all our actions we won't buy it. So they keep thjings topsecret here and try to cover up there so we believe the narrative that others are going for us because of their extreme religion etc. That message is pushed through and becomes toppriority. So even though many of us see AGW as a seriosu threat for our future and that of our fellow beings it is no longer a toppriority.

But our morals are not the problem, nor that science should be objective and not moral or opinionated either.

The inaction is largely based that the most powerful have other objectives than the majority of the people. At least in the West.

- as they long did with smoking, then second hand smoke, then the ozone hole

the ozonhole was scary enough and not so costly so they quickly took action in 1987.

and lake acidification, now global warming, species extinction finally shut their mouths, open their eyes, and recognize the realities that are happening all around us.

Well: where most of the things you mention are proven, the part of species extinctions is not and it is difficult to prove.
To show you how ecology is vastly different here again from climatology: it is perpetuated that so called nonnative species are a main driver of extinctions. But all, yes all, documented extinctions have been researched in a peer reviewed paper in PNAS in 2008. Not single one had so called nonnative alien species as the single driver. Moreover: no extinctions on any continent could be linked to these species. The places where they could be linked is was on islands and islandlike habitats. But even here, the authors noted, many of those species were diwndeling well before the immigrants came about.
This research is undisputed, yet ecology keeps on saying the same thing. Moreover: it also advocates measures against them. Like bait 1081 in Australia against foxes and rabbits, in New Zealand too. Like warfarien against the Grey Squirrel which gets this creature an Ebola kind of death, Poisonining here and poisining there (like some birds in the USA).

Here ecology has crossed a line clearly. First of all it has no proof that these species are a maindriver whatsoever. Second of all they advocate a masslaughter of millions and millions of sentient beings intheir papers (not as private persons) with no solution in sight. Non of these masskillings has eradication as the final outcome.

Now we can ask: is this what scientist shoudl do. And what does this mean. What if scientists start to discriminate between some human species and attribute some different values to the different races....

In 1976, I heard Aileen Smith and doctors and scientists familiar with the Minimata atrocity decry the signs of similar mercury poisoning at the Grassy Narrows reserve. Ontario government "Scientists" and "researchers" kept finding ways of raising doubts about the lethal concentrations and hypothesizing Rube Goldberg "natural" processes. Last year, an ex-employee of the pulp mill upstream testified to being directed to dump and burry dozens of barrels. Even after that Government "scientists" spun new evasions until independent agencies, hired by the reserve, finally confirmed what the levels are.

I am talking about scientists, not "scientists". if someone cannot deliver facts it means they can not prove their point. So there is every reason to doubt.

"Scientists" and the "need for further research" and appeals to natural processes have managed to delay action for four decades and likely contribute to neural damage of more than a generation.

Again....we are not talking about the same people it seems. You are talking about deniers who will keep on telling the same stories in contrast with the facts at hand. There is no scientific doubt humans cause global warming. There is no scientific proof nonnative species are a maindriver of extinctions. Both fall in the same category, that of pseudoscientists.

There will always be some doubts about ultimate causes, about intricate dynamic mechanisms,

No. There is statistics that we use and we have agreed on what is significant. very singificant etcetc. It is always the same. When we claim to know things as a scientist the same rules must apply. Otherwise doublestandards, weak evidence etc starts to run amoc.

about the interaction of complex systems and there will always be some who prefer to ponder and debate them. But there also come a time to act.

Action does not hinge on the strength of scientific proof as you have demonstrated. Action hinges more on a perceived threat, the risks involved. We took drastic action when sexual transmitted HIV caused horrifiic death. Despite some doctors and physicians were still saying HIV did not cause AIDS even in the 2000s already in 1985 people took very little chance and used condoms. At the start infected patient, without any proof, were no longer allowed in schools etcetc.

So we do not need strong evidence to take action. We as a society must assess that ourselves. Facts sound facts we can rely on without any bias from the factfinder can help us.

What would help us a lot more is a chnage in our political systems where we do not vote for one liar on another that then can do as he/she pleases for four years and holds us hostage by abusing our fears and media to spread propaganda about an insignificant enemy we ourselves created. we should not have one choice on a person that than choses to do what we like here but precisely not what we do not like there.

If there was a referendum on climate change a majority woulkd vote for action, on war in the ME and most places the majority would vote against it etc.

Our morals and even our knowledge are fine, we are misguided and we do not live ina representative democracy at all. We have in fact very little to say.

Now....we are not really sure that among all those immigrants aren't any terrorists. Would you agree that the right thing to do is to shut down all border for all those people because even without any facts it is feeasible that terrorists use that route. In Europe some did, it is proven. And do you believe those who found the fact that a few terrorists have entered Europe via Turkey Greece etc also have some special knowledge what to do about?

Or do we need facts on this before we decide what to do with these immigrants fleeing a warzone mostly and should we as a society decide what is appropriate based on those facts rather than our fears?

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