Louis Proyect,
The Greanville Post
December 2017
A biology professor says the sixth mass extinction is no big deal because other species will evolve to fill in the gaps. History, ecology and ethics say he’s dead wrong.
A recent op-ed in the Washington Post titled “We don’t need to save endangered species. Extinction is part of evolution” has generated an extraordinary amount of comments, with most of those 3,279 being negative. If you were only going by the title, you’d think that it was written by someone like Spiked Online’s Brendan O’Neill or perhaps Ryan Zinke, Trump’s Secretary of the Interior who is bent on opening national monuments to drilling, or even Donald Trump’s feckless sons who are into big-game hunting.

Western Black Rhino: wiped out, not by climate or habitat destruction
per se, but human predation.
Actually, it was written by R. Alexander Pyron, who is the Robert F.
Griggs Associate Professor of Biology at George Washington University. You
might wonder if Griggs was some ultraright Texas oilman (isn’t that
redundant?) who donated $10 million to the school in order to provide a
platform for the anti-environmental views of people like Dr. Pyron. As it
happens, Robert F. Griggs was a botanist who led a 1915 National Geographic
Society expedition to observe the aftermath of the Katmai volcanic eruption
in Alaska. He became so passionate about the beauty and biodiversity of the
affected area that his advocacy helped it become a national park of the sort
that Ryan Zinke wants to turn over to ExxonMobil on a silver platter.
The first paragraph of Pyron’s article sets the tone by pointing out that
during an expedition in Ecuador, he discovered a Rio Pescado stubfoot toad
that was considered extinct. But even if it goes extinct, it will be
replaced by hundreds of other amphibians. So, why get worked up?
Pyron argues that it is extinction itself that generates new species. He
does have a point. When an asteroid plunged into the Gulf of Mexico 66
million years ago, it killed perhaps 75% of all animals, with dinosaurs
bearing the brunt of the destruction. However, in its wake, it created an
environment suited to producing new species such as horses, whales, bats,
and primates. Birds, fish, and perhaps lizards also found the new
environment amenable to their reproduction according to Wikipedia.
The professor also shrugs his shoulders about climate change. Except for
Donald Trump it would seem, elected officials hope to keep the temperature
to under two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. Why bother, he
asks since “the temperature has been at least eight degrees Celsius warmer
within the past 65 million years.” And furthermore, twenty-one thousand
years ago, Boston was under an ice sheet a kilometer thick. Comme ci comme
ça.
Do his arguments remind you of anybody? For me, they suggest a biological
counterpart to Joseph Schumpeter’s “creative destruction.” Yes, there might
be an economic collapse but it always clears the ground for new growth.
Yeah, it was too bad that 80 million people died during WWII but without
Germany making a huge investment in achieving military superiority, we might
not have ended up with rockets of the sort that Werner Von Braun invented.
And without them, we might not have had all those satellites providing
telecommunications that make globalization possible. And, if we end up
seeing nuclear-tipped ICBM’s leveling New York, Moscow, Pyongyang, and
Beijing, there’s always the possibility that newer and better cities will
rise out of the ashes Phoenix-like. And, god forbid, if life on earth is
destroyed, we can always count on Jeff Bezos to rescue the fortunate few as
he finally realizes his dream, a humongous colony in outer space.
There’s no sense in worrying. It might be best to adopt an almost Hindu-like
reincarnation philosophy in the face of impending doom. Just think. In 50
million years, Europe will smash into Africa and create a new
supercontinent, destroying all sorts of birds, fish, and anything that gets
in the path of this inevitable catastrophic event. But, have no fear, all
sorts of new species will arrive, maybe even the dodo and the mastodon will
return. By that point, Jeff Bezos will have left behind a brilliant team of
scientists to accomplish almost anything even if long before that happens
David Duke, the victorious Republican Party candidate in 2020, decides to
unleash thermonuclear weapons against New York City, San Francisco, and Los
Angeles to destroy Satan in the name of Jesus Christ, our savior.
It is when I got to this paragraph that I wondered if Pyron had written an
Onion-like spoof:
“Conserving biodiversity should not be an end in itself; diversity can even
be hazardous to human health. Infectious diseases are most prevalent and
virulent in the most diverse tropical areas. Nobody donates to campaigns to
save HIV, Ebola, malaria, dengue and yellow fever, but these are key
components of microbial biodiversity, as unique as pandas, elephants and
orangutans, all of which are ostensibly endangered thanks to human
interference.”

Frogs—like all amphibians—are among the most endangered species.
Has this professor ever read anything about the way that HIV got
started? Most scientists believe that it was the human encroachment on the
jungle that led to the first transmission of the virus from chimpanzees to
human beings in the 1920s. Indeed, the National Geographic, the very
magazine that funded the exploration led by the man who Pyron’s endowed
chair is named after, published an article in June 2003 that states:
“Scientists believe the encroachment by humans on nature also increases the
spread of infectious diseases. The SIVcpz strain [that led to HIV] jumping
from chimpanzees to humans likely occurred when humans hunted and butchered
chimps for “bush meat,” something humans have done for centuries.
“Increased human populations have increased the chances of a virus
successfully propagating among humans once it has made the jump. The SIVcpz
strain was probably transmitted to humans in previous centuries, but never
established a substantial enough transmission chain among humans to cause a
large outbreak.”
There are one of two possibilities that explain Pyron’s incomprehensible
fatalism. He might be an ideologue so committed to libertarian economics
that the long-term prospects of civilization are indifferent to him, just as
they are to the Koch brothers who could care less about the future of the
planet. As they used to say during the Reagan presidency, those who die with
the most toys wins.
It also may be the case that the professor lacks the philosophical, ethical
and historical breadth to put these questions into perspective. Unlike other
scientists who make sweeping judgments on such questions like Jared Diamond
or E.O. Wilson, Pyron has never written anything like this outside of his
narrow scholarly interest in reptiles.
For example, he refers to the “verdant wilderness we see now in the
Catskills, Shenandoah and the Great Smoky Mountains” growing back in the
past century with very few extinctions or permanent losses of biodiversity.
Really? Does he have any idea how the Catskills got its name? This was the
name Henry Hudson and his crew coined when they saw mountain lions teeming
across the mountains overlooking the river. Kaat is the Dutch word for cat
and kill means river. They, like the Monsee Indians that lived in the area,
are gone forever. They were hunted to extinction just as the bison were in
the Great Plains.
Does this make any difference as long as new toads and snake species crop up
to take their place? Clearly, the question is nonsensical and is an
unwarranted concession to the professor’s tendency to take into account the
sheer quantity of species rather than their quality. If Bluefin tuna
disappear, it doesn’t matter that 100 new varieties of sponges and jellyfish
take their place or that if eagles and condors go extinct, there will be new
varieties of crows, pigeons, and starlings to take their place.
The tuna occupies a place in the marine food chain that is indispensable.
Its loss means that the natural balance of marine life is threatened. Once
again, it is the National Geographic that provides the context that is so
lacking in Pyron’s op-ed piece:
“The Atlantic bluefin plays a significant role in the ecosystem by consuming
a wide variety of fish—herring, anchovies, sardines, bluefish, mackerel, and
others—and keeping their populations in balance. According to the WWF,
“ecological extinction of this species would thus have unpredictable
cascading effects in the North Atlantic, Mediterranean, and Gulf of Mexico
ecosystems and entail serious consequences to many other species in the food
chain.”
It is entirely possible that Alex Pyron has not read much literature about
ecology even though he is an evolutionary biologist who normally should be
able to make such elementary distinctions. This is a man who started out as
a child prodigy, entering college at the age of 12 and earning a Ph.D. by
the time he was 22. Maybe he was too busy studying snakes in the field to
read Plato, Leo Tolstoy, Immanuel Kant, William Blake or Henry David
Thoreau.
His narrow focus on snakes and other amphibians would likely have also
robbed him of the time needed to read people like Mike Davis, Donald Worster
or Clive Ponting who are generalists in the field of ecology. Pyron wrote an
article titled “Extinction, Ecological Opportunity, And The Origins Of
Global Snake Diversity” for the January 2012 copy of Evolution that reflects
his narrow vision. It begins by noting that “Many taxonomie groups comprise
clades with vast disparities in species richness, even among closely related
lineages in adjacent areas (Fischer 1960; Rosenzweig 1995). A prime example
is Lepidosauria: tuataras are represented by only two extant species, while
their sister group Squamata (lizards and snakes) contains nearly 9000
species (Vitt and Caldwell 2009).”
He extrapolates from his research that the rich variety of Squamata should
be a mitigating factor against the threat of the extinction of wildlife at
the top of the food chain, including polar bears, blue whales, Bluefin tuna,
orangutan, gorillas, chimpanzees, wolves, grizzly bears, tigers, lions,
elephants, rhinos, etc.
No thanks.
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