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Earth Day 2019, Earth Day Network (EDN), Protect our Species Primer and Action Toolkit, Ten facts for global species decline
Photo Credit: Bees – Earth Day Network
April 22nd is Earth Day 2019. The theme this year – Protect Our Species – aims to “educate and raise awareness about the accelerating rate of extinction of millions of species and the causes and consequences of this phenomenon.” Other goals include achieving major policies to protect these species, building a global movement that embraces nature, and encouraging individual actions to adopt a plant-based diet and stop pesticide and herbicide use.
Since the loss of the dinosaurs more than 60 million years ago, our planet now faces the greatest rate of extinction due to human impact on their habitats. Learn more about What is driving this process of extinction?
Earth Day Network (EDN) sums up the scope of this threat with the following 10 facts for global species decline. It’s a shameful report card of our deficiency in stewardship.
Fact #1 – Our planet is losing species at an estimated 1,000 to 10,000 times their normal rate.
Fact #2 – A new study of insect populations in Germany suggests a decline of more than 75% over the last 28 years.
Fact #3 – Habitat destruction, exploitation, and climate change are driving the loss of half of our planet’s wild animal population.
Fact #4 – Among our planet’s 504 primate species, 60% are threatened with extinction and 75% are in severe population decline.
Fact #5 – Across our planet each year, more than 650,000 marine mammals are caught or seriously injured by fishing gear.
Fact #6 – In the past 20 years, global fishing operations have adversely affected 75% of all toothed whale species, 65% of baleen whale species, and 65% of pinniped species.
Fact #7 – Forty percent (40%) of our planet’s bird species are in decline and 1 in 8 is threatened with extinction.
Fact #8 – Earth’s big cats, including tigers, leopards, and cheetahs, are in critical decline and many will become extinct in the next decade.
Fact #9 – If the current decline in lizard populations continues, 40% of all lizard species will be extinct by 2080.
Fact #10 – The American Bison, once numbered in the millions, now occupy less than one percent of their original habitat.
Learn more at EDN’s Protect our Species Primer and Action Toolkit.
All is not yet lost. We can slow the rate of extinctions by working together to build a united global movement of consumers, educators, religious leaders, and scientists to demand immediate action.
For too long, we humans have placed ourselves above and apart from our planetary web of life, ignoring the interconnectivity of all life forms. To drive national and global economic growth, our species continue to mistreat, exploit, and destroy non-human life. Do our cities have to burn like the Notre Dame Cathedral for humankind to finance and take swift, decisive action to do what needs to be done?
It is grim isn’t it. And yet we can make a difference if we’ve a mind. While what the fact 10 says about the American bison is true, it’s also true that it is no longer considered endangered with extinction. So on this day we also need to recognise that change is possible, and for each of us to do something positive to help correct the mistakes of the past.
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Yes, Geoff, we can succeed when we put our mind to it, as with the American bison. Tragically, the corporate elite that hold our governments in stranglehold will continue to resist change until their profit-making enterprises turn to dust.
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I’m 65 and I can notice the difference since I was a boy. I used to turn over bricks to see what horrible insects and other creepy crawlies were underneath. Nowadays, I haven’t seen a millipede or a centipede for years. We used to see clouds of butterflies as youngsters, but now you are lucky to see just one on its own.
Let’s name names. Here in England it’s greedy, unscrupulous farmers. A lot try to help wildlife, and well done to them, but the vast majority couldn’t care less if there are skylarks or not. Government grants for farmers should be based on the biodiversity of their land.
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John, I also notice the difference here in Southern California. And I’ve only been here fourteen years!
Agriculture, with its vast acreage of monocultures, has become BIG business worldwide. Small farmers have had to fall in line in order to survive. Your suggestion that “government grants for farmers should be based on the biodiversity of their land” could be a way forward.
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These are some pretty depressing statistics. We can only hope that more people become conscious of it because our existing government is only going to make it worse.
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Ken, here on the blogosphere, I sometimes feel that I’m preaching to the converted. The majority of my neighbors are caught up in the day-to-day struggles to stay afloat. Through my gardening on the weekends, I have found a way to share my love of nature with those who take the time to stop and chat. With their newfound awe of the natural world around them, the little ones are the most receptive. The youngest among them, an adorable two-year-old, has just planted a tomato seedling, and with her working-mother’s help, will watch it grow.
But all is not lost. Last week, one neighbor bought a wide variety of succulent plants–they do well in our dry climate–and pots and asked me to help with the transplanting. Another neighbor asked me to help her select a tomato plant at our local garden center. We worked together to put it in the ground. With her daily care, the tomato plant is doing great.
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Thank you for sharing!.. unfortunately there are many in this world who are self-centered, caring only for themselves and their personal well being and will reject change.. not likely the leadership of this world will help matters either.. it is up to us to help make the change, starting at home and helping others worldwide in some manner… 🙂
“Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.” Barack Obama
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I’m with you, Dutch. Change begins with me. I invite my blogging friends to stop by at your blog to discover the unusual ways that we can contribute to change within our individual spaces 🙂
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Reblogged this on Guyanese Online.
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Thanks for sharing, Cyril 🙂 I envy your Caribbean Easter weekend of picnics and kite-flying. Happy Easter!
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Pingback: Earth Day 2019: Protect Our Species – By Rosaliene Bacchus
Summing up the most of the comments,it is obvious to me that the will to correct a false social path has to manifest from among ‘the great unwashed masses’ but also as committed individuals doing their part, however insignificant that part may seem.
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I agree, Sha’Tara. Your use of the description “the great unwashed masses” is very appropriate. We’ve got a lot of cleaning up to do, beginning with all the clutter accumulated in our collective minds since the beginning of the industrial revolution.
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Rosaliene,
It’s sad, isn’t it? Like jfwknifton above, I’ve noticed a serious decline in insects where I live, except the biting ones seem to have proliferated. I haven’t seen a lightning bug in years, but they used to light up the night. Don’t blame the farmers, because the use of pesticides and herbicides is rampant, with RoundUp and other poisons that the dump won’t take being sold to homeowners at Home Depot. Our county health department has a mosquito control division that sprays the entire marsh with malathion. Bee keepers are supposed to be warned in advance of a spraying, but the county “forgets” to warn them sometimes, and hives are lost. Malathion is an all-purpose insecticide and kills way more than mosquitoes. And, of course, everything up the food chain from the insects is affected. Herbicides, meanwhile, are doing their part to destroy underground life, like soil fungi, which are crucial to plant growth. So we are de-vitalizing the planet from above and below.
Jared Diamond, in his book “Collapse,” claims deforestation was the cause of the collapse of several civilizations, because of the destruction of bird (and other animals’) habitat, as well as causing erosion and other results of wanton exploitation.
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Thanks for that reminder, Katharine. The pesticides and herbicides are also directly affecting human populations within the treated areas, resulting in an increase in health problems. I avoid using these harmful products in my garden and find natural means to deal with pests. I’ve learned, too, to let nature do its work and had watched in wonderment when tiny, yellow, caterpillars consumed the leaves of my daisy plant. Over two years have passed since I last saw a caterpillar.
Collapse by Jared Diamond sounds like a must-read.
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smiling to your dedicated encouragement, Rosaliene
that we come together to recognize
our collective predicament
and compassionately
take the right actions.
may it be so 🙂
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So glad that I could make you smile, David 🙂 When hope dies, we also die.
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such efforts at encouraging
a collective awakening
will live on
as fresh blossoms 🙂
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So beautifully expressed, David ❤ I've just learned through another blogger of other efforts at collective awakening. Check them out at http://www.eldersclimateaction.org/
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thanks for the resource, Rosaliene!
i’ll connect with those concerned elders 🙂
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We humans behave as though existence is a game. We don’t respect life, not even our own. The only thing that’s important to us is the game. To play it, we built an impressive slide on the edge of cliff. Everyone tries to climb to the top so they can enjoy the exhilarating but brief ride down the slide. What we didn’t plan for is a safe landing.
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Perfect analogy, that!
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Well said, Robert! As Sha’Tara notes, it’s a perfect analogy.
Your comment about “a safe landing” brought to mind a disturbing scene in the second episode of the Netflix eight-part series, “Our Planet,” narrated by David Attenborough, that I watched last night. As global warming melts the ice of their natural habitat in the Bering Strait, walruses are forced to live on land with steep, rocky slopes. In the scene shown, those who make it to the top, escaping the tight squeeze below, had expected a safe landing on their return to the water’s edge. Instead, they plummet to their deaths.
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So sad…
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To play on an old joke, when our country was founded we had leaders like Washington, Jefferson, and Madison. Today we have DT, Lindsey Graham, and Mitch McConnell.
What does this tell us?
Darwin was wrong! Not so funny, anymore, given the situation you have described so well. Thank you, Rosaliene.
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Dr. Stein, I’m lost for words at the lack of leadership at the top, as I commented recently on Robert’s post “Mueller report fallout: How institutional cowardice led to civil war.”
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As a followup to this entry, my next blog will cover some road trip travel observations about Earth Day importance in Central Coastal California? Are you a member of Amy environmental inititiative?
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I look forward to reading your next blog post, James. No, I’m not a member of the Amy environmental initiative.
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Happy Easter dear Rosaliene ❤️
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Same to you, Laleh ❤
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❤️
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While it could seem as if you’re preaching to the converted Rosaliene your posts are always significant. Your scholarly approach, presenting hard facts and statistics is of high value even to those who share a similar awareness. When you dig into a subject your shovel has one of the longest handles I’ve encountered.
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Love your analogy, Mike! Thanks for the complement, though I must mention that a bad knee prevents me from using the long-handle shovel 🙂
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Excellent post, Rosaliene. Sometimes I feel like all may be lost but your ended with a hopeful statement. And, I agree, if only the outpouring for Notre Dame could be replicated to saving our environment, our grandchildren will thank us.
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Thanks for dropping by, Jane. Your photos of the beauty, diversity, and richness of our planet lifted my spirits. We risk losing it all.
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Thanks so much, Rosaliene.
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Really harsh facts, i feel crushed. We are supposed to be borrowing this space from our children. What do we leave them?! 😔
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Sadly, Kavitha, we are entitled takers; we don’t borrow.
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A strange species of predatory scavengers that takes without asking and returns nothing except poisonous excrement. Within the known reality can anyone determine what purpose the creatures serve; why they should be permitted to continue to proliferate?
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A tragic and justified indictment of the human species, Sha’Tara. Time will tell if we, too, will disappear like the mighty dinosaurs.
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Sadly, true. 😔
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This is scary truth. I’ve never understood how we as a species tend to place ourselves above other species. We are all connected. We are all valuable. All is not yet lost. I hope these facts will be a wake up call for humans. More like an alarm!
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Scary truth, indeed, JoAnna. A growing number of young people have heard the alarm and are now calling for action. We adults have yet to respond with the urgency needed.
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Hi. The data you present is sad and incredible. What humans have done to this planet is insane.
Neil S.
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It sure is, Neil! Even worse, we don’t recognize our own insanity.
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A shameful report indeed! When I read it the first time I was shocked. Of course I’ve also noticed that there are far less creepy crawlees around then there used to be, but I never imagined it was this much.
And I liked your reference to the burning of Notre Dame – it really seems people only act when confronted harshly. But my hopes are that it doesn’t have to come this far for us to react in time. Change starts with every one of us, and it’s posts like yours that hopefully will make people see that they have to act – and fast!
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Sarah, thanks for adding your voice to humankind’s unfolding existential crisis. Thanos, Marvel’s supervillan and destroyer of worlds, exists and he is us.
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Excellent post, Rosaliene… Spreading the word–let’s make every day Earth Day! 🙂
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Thanks, Bette 🙂
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