Add Your Photos and Video to This Story

Should species be moved to save them?

by Mon-Mage | July 18, 2008 at 02:45 pm | 109 views | add comment

WASHINGTON: With climate change increasingly threatening the survival of plants and animals, scientists say it may become necessary to move some species to save them. Dubbed assisted colonization or assisted migration, the idea is to decide how severe the threat is to various species, and if they need help to deal with it.

"When I first brought up this idea some 10 years ago in conservation meetings, most people were horrified," said Camille Parmesan, a biology professor at the University of Texas.

"But now, as the reality of global warming sinks in, and species are already becoming endangered and even going extinct because of climate change, I'm seeing a new willingness in the conservation community to at least talk about the possibility of helping out species by moving them around," she said.

There are plenty of risks in moving plants and animals to new locations. They may not survive, or they may become invasive, growing wildly without predators and crowding out natives of their new location. And it's not possible to relocate every species that may need it, so how to decide who gets moved and who gets left behind to become extinct?

Stanford biologist Terry Root has been traveling the country urging her colleagues to come up with a plan for "triage" to decide which species should be saved from global warming and which can't. But which species to save?

"We've got to work on the ones we have a prayer of saving," Root said. Some species will have to be written off, she suggested, such as threatened and endangered species of the Sky Islands in Arizona and New Mexico because "they don't have any place to move to".

"Those species are functionally extinct right now," Root said. "They're toast." When deciding which species to save and which to watch die, Root said one key is uniqueness. That's why she said she'd save the odd-looking Tuatara of New Zealand, a lizard-like creature with almost no living relatives, over the common sparrow.



This is one question that we as citizens of the earth have to ask ourselves because at the rate that we are polluting the environment we are eliminating numerous rare species. In the immediately foreseable future I don't see us as a people changing our polluting habits so we'll have to make the decision as to which species we will choose to save. As unethical as it sounds, it is a realtiy that we will have to deal with.

Comments (0)

Add a comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

July 18, 2008 at 02:45 pm by Mon-Mage, 109 views, add comment

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from