We were living in a cataclysmic age of mass extinction and climate instability even before the election. Now the climate denier in chief is poised to gut the environmental protections that do exist. Even so, conservation nonprofits are struggling to raise the funds they need to challenge his wrecking-ball agenda in court. The people who care are feeling defeated, and the fight has not yet begun.
I was already grieving, and the approach of Remembrance Day for Lost Species, which falls each year on Nov. 30, didn't help. Was this really the best time to pick up "Vanishing Treasures: A Bestiary of Extraordinary Endangered Creatures" by the dazzling British author and scholar Katherine Rundell? Did I really want to read another book about how so much of life on earth is close to ending?
As it turns out, this is the perfect book to read in the aftermath of a planet-threatening election. In times like these, terror and rage will carry us only so far. We will also need unstinting, unceasing love. For the hard work that lies ahead, Ms. Rundell writes, "Our competent and furious love will have to be what fuels us." This is a book to help you fall in love.
Among the 23 endangered creatures she celebrates in "Vanishing Treasures," the last on the list is humans. This is not a sly overstatement to make a point. How will we grow crops if we lose the pollinators? What medical advancements — like the GLP-1 drugs, derived from a study of Gila monsters, that now treat diabetes and obesity — will we miss if reptiles go extinct? Which diseases will run rampant in our communities if scavengers are poisoned out of existence?
Today I am planning to do my presentation on a topic relevant to this. What happens when we destroy habitats and increase opportunity for animal and human contact? What happens when we become a planet full of just weeds? I am genuinely concerned for the future and have recently become less hopeful and settled on curiosity.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was doing some reading for my upcoming presentation, my chapter discussed "nonhuman animals" and if their future was "good" or "bad." I saw how we as a species have made the existence of a majority of species a struggle. We see this as more and more species become endangered due to our own impact.
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