A project to revive long-gone species is a sideshow to the real extinction crisis
“We will get woolly mammoths back.” So vowed environmentalist Stewart Brand at the TED conference in Long Beach, Calif., in February in laying out his vision for reviving extinct species. The mammoth isn’t the only vanished creature Brand and other proponents of “de-extinction” want to resurrect. The passenger pigeon, Caribbean monk seal and great auk are among the other candidates—all species that blinked out at least in part because of Homo sapiens. “Humans have made a huge hole in nature in the last 10,000 years,” Brand asserted. “We have the ability now—and maybe the moral obligation—to repair some of the damage.”
Just a few years ago such de-extinction was the purview of science fiction. Now it is so near at hand that in March, Brand’s Long Now Foundation, along with TED and the National Geographic Society, convened an entire conference on the topic. Indeed, thanks to recent advances in cloning and the sequencing of ancient DNA, among other feats of biotechnology, researchers may soon be able to re-create any number of species once thought to be gone for good.
That does not mean that they should, however. The idea of bringing back extinct species holds obvious gee-whiz appeal and a respite from a steady stream of grim news. Yet with limited intellectual bandwidth and financial resources to go around, de-extinction threatens to divert attention from the modern biodiversity crisis. According to a 2012 report from the International Union for Conservation of Nature, some 20,000 species are currently in grave danger of going extinct. Species today are vanishing in such great numbers—many from hunting and habitat destruction—that the trend has been called a sixth mass extinction, an event on par with such die-offs as the one that befell the dinosaurs (and much else) 65 million years ago. A program to restore extinct species poses a risk of selling the public on a false promise that technology alone can solve our ongoing environmental woes—an implicit assurance that if a species goes away, we can snap our fingers and bring it back.
Ironically, the de-extinction conference immediately followed the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) meeting in Bangkok, which underscored just how devastating the trade has been. Reports released to coincide with the meeting revealed that between 2002 and 2011, the African forest elephant population declined by 62 percent from poaching; that fishing kills at least 100 million sharks a year—many of them members of imperiled species; and that between 2000 and 2012, an average of 110 tigers a year were killed (as few as 3,200 of the cats remain in the wild). Poachers slaughter 30,000 African elephants every year for their ivory—the highest kill rate since the 1980s. At this rate, the species could disappear in two decades. So could Africa’s rhinos, prized for their horns.
Already conservationists face difficult choices about which species and ecosystems to try to save, since they cannot hope to rescue them all.
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- Scientists want to clone an extinct bison unearthed from Siberian permafrost. Experts are skeptical.on March 23, 2023 at 10:10 am
Researchers in Russia recently dissected a mummified bison dating back to around 8,000 years ago. The remains are so well preserved that the team thinks the extinct animal could be cloned, but others ...
- Why scientists want to bring extinct animals back from the deadon February 22, 2023 at 1:53 am
With selective back-breeding, scientists locate subjects that carry ancient traits from related extinct species and selectively ... region cooler by "(a) eating dead grass, thus enabling the ...
- Why scientists want to bring extinct animals back from the deadon February 22, 2023 at 1:45 am
With selective back-breeding, scientists locate subjects that carry ancient traits from related extinct species and selectively breed them ... arctic could keep the region cooler by "(a) eating dead ...
- The Cost of Resurrecting Extinct Species Could be Devastatingon March 24, 2017 at 9:43 am
Advances in genetic engineering have made it possible for scientists to bring back extinct animals, the most promising of which is the woolly mammoth. American and Russian scientists have been ...
- These Are The 11 Extinct Animals on the List to Be Brought Back to Lifeon January 31, 2017 at 4:37 pm
Scientists are on the brink of finding ways to bring species back from the dead — that is, from their long (and in some cases, brief) history of extinction. In preparation for de-extinction ...
- Six Extinct Animals, and How We Can Bring Them Backon February 27, 2015 at 1:07 pm
Father-and-son scientists George and Hendrik Poinar have helped set the stage in recent decades for a dramatic advance: Resurrecting extinct species. Read more about their efforts in our feature ...
- Bringing extinct species back from the deadon September 5, 2008 at 5:00 am
(CNN)-- The word "extinct" sounds pretty final -- and as a concept, it certainly should be. But the normal harbinger of bad news - the "Red List" issued by the World Conservation Union (IUCN ...
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- Undercover cop infiltrated Extinction Rebellion chat groups: reporton March 20, 2023 at 11:38 pm
An undercover police officer posed as an environmental activist, infiltrated two private Extinction Rebellion chat groups, and followed along with the messages posted there for weeks. Trouw, De Groene ...
- Extinct but not gone: The thylacine continues to fascinateon March 20, 2023 at 10:08 am
Human life on Earth is utterly dependent on biodiversity but our activities are driving an increase in extinctions. Yet some extinct species continue to hold our fascination. New methods in genetics ...
- Extinct but not gone – the thylacine continues to fascinate uson March 19, 2023 at 2:45 pm
New methods in genetics and reproductive biology hold the promise that de-extinction – resurrecting extinct species – could soon be possible. But bringing back extinct species is costly.
- Bringing Extinct Animals Back to Life: How Cloning and De-Extinction Startups Are Making History by Reviving Extinct Mammoths, Tigers and Wolveson March 16, 2023 at 6:28 pm
Extinct in the mid-1600s the dodo bird is one of several species the company is considering for de-extinction. Researchers use 500-year-old dodo remains kept at a Denmark museum as the genetic ...
- Extinctions on the island of the dodo are pushing plants towards extinctionon March 16, 2023 at 3:51 am
Another high-profile project has proposed the 'de-extinction' of the dodo, followed by its reintroduction to the island. Proponents of the project have said this would help to restore Mauritian ...
- Could de-extincting the dodo help struggling species?on March 15, 2023 at 7:10 pm
How her initial work mapping the dodo genome laid the groundwork to bring back a version of it from extinction, and how the knowledge scientists gain from de-extinction could help protect species ...
- De-extinction movement trying to bring back extinct wildlife specieson March 14, 2023 at 6:35 am
De-extinction, the concept of resurrecting extinct species, has long been a topic of debate among scientists and the general public.
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