Humans
are turning the Earth into a 'lonely and very dangerous planet',
ecologist warns
Mankind
is wiping out species so fast it could put the world into an
irreversible ''downward spiral
Humans
are turning the world into a “lonely planet” depleted of its rich
biodiversity, and there could soon come a point when the mass
extinction of species turns into an irreversible spiral of decline,
according to a leading ecologist.
Professor
Ed Wilson, an authority on biodiversity at Harvard University, said
that the extinction rate of species is running at between 100 and
1,000 times higher than in pre-human times and that we are on course
to lose half of all animals and plants by the end of the century.
“We’re
making a lonely planet. More than that, if we continue to destroy the
biosphere it becomes a very dangerous planet,” professor Wilson
told i on a recent visit to Britain.
“If
you wiped out enough species, all of those say in South America, then
that may be a tipping point where you get enough changes globally to
begin a downward spiral,” professor Wilson said.
“A
tipping point will come, but we don’t know when. However, the
important thing is that it will come, and maybe sooner than we
thought if we continue to destroy the natural habitat, and in
particular the species,” he said.
“You
can rehabilitate a damaged habitat to some extent, but you can’t do
that if you have gotten rid of species. We would lose them forever,
and I think that would be a tipping point in human existence,” he
added.
During
his visit to the UK, professor Wilson, 85, broke the ground on a £30m
construction project on the Isle of Portland on the south coast of
England to commemorate the 460 species that are known to have gone
extinct in the past 500 years, from the dodo to the Tasmanian devil.
The
Mass Extinction Monitoring Observatory will be built from the
Portland limestone of the Jurassic Coast, which was used extensively
in re-building St Paul’s Cathedral after the Great Fire of London.
“We
need a transcendent moral decision to stop species extinction, and
that should be made to include the stopping of the destruction of the
biosphere,” professor Wilson told i.
Professor
Wilson has spent a lifetime studying the biodiversity of rainforests
and other wild habitats.
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