Sunday, October 29, 2023

The Scientists Watching Their Life’s Work Disappear

The cover story in Sunday's NYTimes Magazine:

Some are stubborn optimists. Others struggle with despair. Their faces show the weight they carry as they witness the impact of climate change.

Amid the chaos of climate change, humans tend to focus on humans. But Earth is home to countless other species, including animals, plants and fungi. For centuries, we have been making it harder for them to exist by cutting down forests, plowing grasslands, building roads, damming rivers, draining wetlands and polluting. Now that wildlife is depleted and hemmed in, climate change has come crashing down. In 2016, scientists in Australia announced the loss of a rodent called the Bramble Cay melomys, one of the first known species driven to global extinction by climate change. Others are all but certain to follow. How many depends on how much we let the planet heat.

The seven scientists here document the impacts of global warming on the nonhuman world. Their work brings them face to face with realities that few of us see firsthand. Some are stubborn optimists. Some struggle with despair. To varying degrees, they all take comfort in nature's resilience. But they know it goes only so far. These scientists are witnesses to an intricately connected world that we have pushed out of balance. Their faces show the weight they carry... (continues)

2 comments:

  1. "These scientists are witnesses to an intricately connected world that we have pushed out of balance." This "intricately connected world" is not discussed enough. We need better education on how we affect so many unexpected things by destroying just one thing actively. It's sad how what we don't know causes so much harm in the world.

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    1. Yes, and unfortunately--tragically--we live in a time when too many influential policy makers are determined to manipulate school curricula to reflect their own anti-environmental (and anti-historical, anti-truth) political agendas. Ecological education from the earliest grade levels has never been more urgent, and never more subverted by venal partisans.

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