Mr Rayon Posted March 23, 2011 Share Posted March 23, 2011 (edited) At what rate are animals disappearing because of global warming? I heard that the extinction rate is phenomenal and is as high as it has ever been. But how high is it exactly? Does anybody know? Edited March 23, 2011 by Voltman Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Horza2002 Posted March 23, 2011 Share Posted March 23, 2011 What source did you hear that the extinction rate is very high from? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rktpro Posted March 23, 2011 Share Posted March 23, 2011 Get a look at the Red Data Book. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sisyphus Posted March 23, 2011 Share Posted March 23, 2011 At what rate are animals disappearing because of global warming? I heard that the extinction rate is phenomenal and is as high as it has ever been. But how high is it exactly? Does anybody know? It's difficult to get precise figures on rates of extinction in the past and present, but yes, most estimates put the current extinction rate at much higher than background rates - perhaps even thousands of times higher. While global warming might contribute to that, it's much less of a factor (so far) than things like habitat loss, introduction of invasive species, and overhunting causing ripple effects through whole ecosystems. This has been going on for thousands of years, and continues to accelerate. Basically, you've got one species, humans, suddenly (in geological timespan) exploding in population, occupying every ecosystem on Earth, and modifying its environment to an extreme degree. Of course there is going to be tremendous disruption and mass extinction. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Alpha Posted March 31, 2011 Share Posted March 31, 2011 No-one knows. Why is that? Because we have not found and described every species on the Earth alive today. Unless we know this, the best we can do is estimate. What we can tell from the species that we do know of, the rate is fast enough to be considered the beginning of the next mass extinction. Caused almost exclusively by us (lovely bunch we are). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marat Posted March 31, 2011 Share Posted March 31, 2011 Some of the emotional/ethical concerns about species extinction are motivated by an inaccurate 'museum-piece' picture of the nature of life on earth. Nature is a highly dynamic, constantly and essentially changing process, and it is in contrast a highly artificial, anthropocentric view of nature which insists that nature should be static and all its presently existing species should be preserved or something immoral is going on. What nature is, considered most essentially and in itself, independently of human opinions about what it should be, is a dynamic system of ecological niches opening and closing which are rapidly filled with new species adaptations and then rapidly emptied of those species as complex interactions of climate, inter-species competition, and geography cause some new species to come into existence and others to drop out of existence. Species extinction is natural. Given their heartiness compared to other entities, naturally cancer-resistant sharks and naturally radiation-resistant cockroaches could well be the only two species left on the planet. The ultimate point is, nature would not 'care,' and this outcome would be entirely natural. What would amount to a freakish transformation of nature would be humans intervening to preserve every species which now contingently happens to exist at this particular conjuncture of the evolutionary dynamic. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Greippi Posted March 31, 2011 Share Posted March 31, 2011 I only have data for "species", not just animals. Based on records from the past 500 years: birds are becoming extinct at a rate of 26 per million species per year. Factoring species that have become extinct without being recorded, and destruction of habitat: 100 per million per year If you assume these figures applies to all 10 million species on earth: 1,000 species lost per year - 3 per day. Obviously, this is a very rough estimate. Source - a recent issue of New Scientist. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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