Tyrannosaurus rex skull and upper vertebral column, a victim of the
fifth major extinction. Palais de la Découverte, Paris, photo by
David.Monniaux.
About 30,000 species go extinct annually.
About 30,000 species go extinct annually.
Extinction in the past
The major global biotic turnovers were all caused by physical events that lay outside the normal climatic and other physical disturbances which species, and entire ecosystems, experience and survive. What caused them?
The previous mass extinctions were due to natural causes.
- First major extinction (c. 440 mya): Climate change (relatively severe and sudden global cooling) seems to have been at work at the first of these-the end-Ordovician mass extinction that caused such pronounced change in marine life (little or no life existed on land at that time). 25% of families lost (a family may consist of a few to thousands of species).
- Second major extinction (c. 370 mya): The next such event, near the end of the Devonian Period, may or may not have been the result of global climate change. 19% of families lost.
- Third major Extinction (c. 245 mya): Scenarios explaining what happened at the greatest mass extinction event of them all (so far, at least!) at the end of the Permian Period have been complex amalgams of climate change perhaps rooted in plate tectonics movements. Very recently, however, evidence suggests that a bolide impact similar to the end-Cretaceous event may have been the cause. 54% of families lost.
- Fourth major extinction (c. 210 mya): The event at the end of the Triassic Period, shortly after dinosaurs and mammals had first evolved, also remains difficult to pin down in terms of precise causes. 23% of families lost.
- Fifth major extinction (c. 65 mya): Most famous, perhaps, was the most recent of these events at the end-Cretaceous. It wiped out the remaining terrestrial dinosaurs and marine ammonites, as well as many other species across the phylogenetic spectrum, in all habitats sampled from the fossil record. Consensus has emerged in the past decade that this event was caused by one (possibly multiple) collisions between Earth and an extraterrestrial bolide (probably cometary). Some geologists, however, point to the great volcanic event that produced the Deccan traps of India as part of the chain of physical events that disrupted ecosystems so severely that many species on land and sea rapidly succumbed to extinction. 17% of families lost.
How is the Sixth Extinction different from previous events?
The current mass extinction is caused by humans.
At first glance, the physically caused extinction events of the past
might seem to have little or nothing to tell us about the current Sixth
Extinction, which is a patently human-caused event. For there is little
doubt that humans are the direct cause of ecosystem stress and species
destruction in the modern world through such activities as:- transformation of the landscape
- overexploitation of species
- pollution
- the introduction of alien species
We are bringing about massive changes in the environment.
Yet, upon further reflection, human impact on the planet is a direct
analogue of the Cretaceous cometary collision. Sixty-five million years
ago that extraterrestrial impact — through its sheer explosive power,
followed immediately by its injections of so much debris into the upper
reaches of the atmosphere that global temperatures plummeted and, most
critically, photosynthesis was severely inhibited — wreaked havoc on the
living systems of Earth. That is precisely what human beings are doing
to the planet right now: humans are causing vast physical changes on the
planet. What is the Sixth Extinction?
We can divide the Sixth Extinction into two discrete phases:- Phase One began when the first modern humans began to disperse to different parts of the world about 100,000 years ago.
- Phase Two began about 10,000 years ago when humans turned to agriculture.
Humans began disrupting the environment as soon as they appeared on Earth.
The first phase began shortly after Homo sapiens evolved in
Africa and the anatomically modern humans began migrating out of Africa
and spreading throughout the world. Humans reached the middle east
90,000 years ago. They were in Europe starting around 40,000 years ago.
Neanderthals, who had long lived in Europe, survived our arrival for
less than 10,000 years, but then abruptly disappeared — victims,
according to many paleoanthropologists, of our arrival through outright
warfare or the more subtle, though potentially no less devastating
effects, of being on the losing side of ecological competition.Everywhere, shortly after modern humans arrived, many (especially, though by no means exclusively, the larger) native species typically became extinct. Humans were like bulls in a China shop:
- They disrupted ecosystems by overhunting game species, which never experienced contact with humans before.
- And perhaps they spread microbial disease-causing organisms as well.
Wherever early humans migrated, other species became extinct.
- Humans arrived in large numbers in North America roughly 12,500 years ago-and sites revealing the butchering of mammoths, mastodons and extinct buffalo are well documented throughout the continent. The demise of the bulk of the La Brea tar pit Pleistocene fauna coincided with our arrival.
- The Caribbean lost several of its larger species when humans arrived some 8000 years ago.
- Extinction struck elements of the Australian megafauna much earlier-when humans arrived some 40,000 years ago. Madagascar-something of an anomaly, as humans only arrived there two thousand years ago-also fits the pattern well: the larger species (elephant birds, a species of hippo, plus larger lemurs) rapidly disappeared soon after humans arrived.
Why does the Sixth Extinction continue?
The invention of agriculture accelerated the pace of the Sixth Extinction.
Phase two of the Sixth Extinction began around 10,000 years ago with
the invention of agriculture-perhaps first in the Natufian culture of
the Middle East. Agriculture appears to have been invented several
different times in various different places, and has, in the intervening
years, spread around the entire globe.Agriculture represents the single most profound ecological change in the entire 3.5 billion-year history of life. With its invention:
- humans did not have to interact with other species for survival, and so could manipulate other species for their own use
- humans did not have to adhere to the ecosystem’s carrying capacity, and so could overpopulate
Humans do not live with nature but outside it.
Homo sapiens became the first species to stop living inside
local ecosystems. All other species, including our ancestral hominid
ancestors, all pre-agricultural humans, and remnant hunter-gatherer
societies still extant exist as semi-isolated populations playing
specific roles (i.e., have “niches”) in local ecosystems. This is not so
with post-agricultural revolution humans, who in effect have stepped
outside local ecosystems. Indeed, to develop agriculture is essentially
to declare war on ecosystems - converting land to produce one or two
food crops, with all other native plant species all now classified as
unwanted “weeds” — and all but a few domesticated species of animals now
considered as pests.The total number of organisms within a species is limited by many factors-most crucial of which is the “carrying capacity” of the local ecosystem: given the energetic needs and energy-procuring adaptations of a given species, there are only so many squirrels, oak trees and hawks that can inhabit a given stretch of habitat. Agriculture had the effect of removing the natural local-ecosystem upper limit of the size of human populations. Though crops still fail regularly, and famine and disease still stalk the land, there is no doubt that agriculture in the main has had an enormous impact on human population size:
Earth can’t sustain the trend in human population growth. It is reaching its limit in carrying capacity.
- Estimates vary, but range between 1 and 10 million people on earth 10,000 years ago.
- There are now over 6 billion people.
- The numbers continue to increase logarithmically — so that there will be 8 billion by 2020.
- There is presumably an upper limit to the carrying capacity of humans on earth — of the numbers that agriculture can support — and that number is usually estimated at between 13-15 billion, though some people think the ultimate numbers might be much higher.
Overpopulation, invasive species, and overexploitation are fueling the extinction.
- More lands are cleared and more efficient production techniques (most recently engendered largely through genetic engineering) to feed the growing number of humans — and in response, the human population continues to expand.
- Higher fossil energy use is helping agriculture spread, further modifying the environment.
- Humans continue to fish (12 of the 13 major fisheries on the planet are now considered severely depleted) and harvest timber for building materials and just plain fuel, pollution, and soil erosion from agriculture creates dead zones in fisheries (as in the Gulf of Mexico)
- While the human Diaspora has meant the spread, as well, of alien species that more often than not thrive at the detriment of native species. For example, invasive species have contributed to 42% of all threatened and endangered species in the U.S.
Can conservation measures stop the Sixth Extinction?
Only 10% of the world’s species survived the third mass extinction. Will any survive this one?
The world’s ecosystems have been plunged into chaos, with some
conservation biologists thinking that no system, not even the vast
oceans, remains untouched by human presence. Conservation measures,
sustainable development, and, ultimately, stabilization of human
population numbers and consumption patterns seem to offer some hope that
the Sixth Extinction will not develop to the extent of the third global
extinction, some 245 mya, when 90% of the world’s species were lost.Though it is true that life, so incredibly resilient, has always recovered (though after long lags) after major extinction spasms, it is only after whatever has caused the extinction event has dissipated. That cause, in the case of the Sixth Extinction, is ourselves — Homo sapiens. This means we can continue on the path to our own extinction, or, preferably, we modify our behavior toward the global ecosystem of which we are still very much a part. The latter must happen before the Sixth Extinction can be declared over, and life can once again rebound.
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