Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Science News

White Dolphin Functionally Extict 868

An anonymous reader writes "For the first time in nearly fifty years another mammal, specifically an aquatic mammal, has gone extinct. In this case, it was the white dolphin, also known as the Baiji, which used to live in the Yangtze River in China. The dolphin had been known to exist for the last 20 million years."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

White Dolphin Functionally Extinct

Comments Filter:
  • Idiots. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Fayn ( 1003629 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @02:57PM (#17226380) Homepage
    Hindsight in 20-20 indeed. Maybe now governments will get the idea that if you want to protect a species, you actually have to protect it. Just sitting arond and holding press conferences and askind advisors endlessly will not solve a single thing. This crap needs to change, and soon.
  • by CrackedButter ( 646746 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:01PM (#17226476) Homepage Journal
    Where did you learn Math? Verizon? Anyway, we should care because we are directly responsible for their extinction, not mother nature.
  • Re:Oops! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by J.R. Random ( 801334 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:02PM (#17226484)

    Makes me feel bad about the tuna sandwiches I had for dinner last night.

    While many ocean dolphins do get killed by tuna nets, the species that went extinct was a river dolphin, unique to the Yangtze. They were done in by the increasing pollution of that river. So instead of feeling bad about the tuna sandwiches you had you should feel bad about the cheap DVD player you bought -- not only did the people who put it together get paid slave wages, but the company that employed them didn't "waste" any money on pollution control.

  • by NeutronCowboy ( 896098 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:06PM (#17226572)
    Because this extinction can be directly traced to human interference. Because the animal was part of an ecosystem that has now been diminished, and human interference therefore harmed the entire ecosystem. Because diminished ecosystems are less resistant to new predators and diseases. Because diminished ecosystems have a point of no return at which they completely collapse, even if other species are still present.

    Most importantly though, because the planet just got a little less interesting and wondrous.
  • Re:heartbreaking (Score:3, Insightful)

    by gt_mattex ( 1016103 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:13PM (#17226698)

    It is heartbreaking.

    In the end it doesn't matter if your political views are left or right. Extinction is threatening a great multitude of species and sooner or later you will be affected negatively. Regardless of who you are or how you define affected.

  • by cp.tar ( 871488 ) <cp.tar.bz2@gmail.com> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:17PM (#17226756) Journal

    Human action, alas, has little to do with natural selection.
    Were it not for that fact, you would be right.

    Oh, wait... you wouldn't be right even then.
    Without competition, there is less need for adaption; freeing up resources (I can hardly imagine what kind, really) has nothing to do with someone "fit" becoming "fitter".
    "Fitness" you speak of is so arbitrary and dependent on a plethora of outside factors that what can be considered "fit" today may well become "completely unfit" tomorrow. Or today, but in a different climate.

  • I agree. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Irvu ( 248207 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:17PM (#17226758)
    I agree. In the book he gives a poiniant description of the environment of the Baiji. Due to heavy traffic the river itself contains constant mechanical noise. For a creature that uses sonar to see and move life in white noise is blindness. He compared it sleshwere eloquently to spending your life in a snowstorm able to see but seeing nothing.

    As much as people may want to celebrate this, or at least gloat, about the weak dying off and this being part of the "natural cycle" I say that's just a bit sick and way too short sighted.

    I'm an environmentalist for many reasons chief among them is that I'm selfish. No matter how much we may like to hide in our offices we depend, completely depend, upon the life on the earth around us. Between Dolphins dying in the Yangtse, to the sheer number of ocean species that will die as the ice retreats the web we depend on is, strand by strand, being cut. Sitting around and saying "I told you so" to each other will do no good. Either we all (all animals) survive or we don't but resorting to simple stories gets us nowhere.
  • by heinousjay ( 683506 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:23PM (#17226862) Journal
    Humans are natural, hence they are part of natural selection. This false dichotomy between nature and man is, frankly, just so much hippie bullshit.
  • by Tyger ( 126248 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:23PM (#17226868)
    Considering the other article is about a fossil of a mammal found, it's more like...

    deadmammals++;
    livingmammals--;
    deadmammals++;
  • by GeckoX ( 259575 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:25PM (#17226906)
    20 Million Years.

    Repeat after me: Twenty Million Years

    Yeah, they just happened to have been naturally selected for extinction now, nevermind that we KNOW exactly what the cause of their decline has been, and that we KNOW it is because of OUR artificial impact on their natural environment.

    You couldn't have picked a worse place or time to pull that steaming pile of shit out.
  • by cp.tar ( 871488 ) <cp.tar.bz2@gmail.com> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:27PM (#17226936) Journal

    Well, they should've evolved some mutant powers to cut through those fishing nets.
    Lasers, probably.

    Or maybe it's a proof of the intelligent design... they'd survived for 20 million years only to get killed by fishing nets.
    Some god or other probably intended that; we can never see the Grand Plan ourselves anyway. Mysterious Ways of God's(TM) or something.

  • by DesireCampbell ( 923687 ) <desire.c@gmail.com> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:27PM (#17226942) Homepage

    Human action, alas, has little to do with natural selection.

    Huh? Humans are animals. Animals killing off other animals is the quintessential example of natural selection.

    Furthermore, natural selection doesn't care about what's "natural" or not. Bears, fishing boats, or meteors - it's all just 'death'.
  • by pixelpusher220 ( 529617 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:31PM (#17227030)
    yes very correct. But in the grand scheme of things, we're more likely to be classified as a 'parasite' on the planet since 'modern' civilizations haven't been able to live in harmony with the environment we occupy.

    *Successful* parasites don't kill the host...we on the other hand are doing are best to kill the earth, our 'host'.


  • Re:Endgame (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Sciros ( 986030 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:31PM (#17227034) Journal
    Well, mind you Jensen partially fulfills Premise Ten himself (that is, the first statement). Trade shipping contributing to an extinction of a species is hardly "an urge to destroy life" manifesting. Honestly if there is reason to lament it does not deserve to be lost in some overarching and baseless criticism of the human condition.
  • yes, 99.9% of all species have gone extinct before mankind came around. but it matters when a creature goes extinct not because of meteors, or climate change, or volcanoes, or what not

    but because of us

    it's about responsibility and accountability. us humans are powerful enough now that we are responsible for this globe. we have have our hand on the global thermostat, we have our hands around the necks of thousands of species. and we can do pretty much whatever we want to

    hear that?: we can do pretty much whatever we want to

    and some of us choose to actually care about what we do to this globe

    i know you don't care, but the fact that you don't care does not move those of us who do care

    and our agenda and our concerns will not be blocked or pushed around by the likes of you

    if you had an agenda of your own, that would be another thing. we could bargain

    but you don't have an agenda. you just don't care what meltdowns or is choked on trash or is paved over with a parking lot. you simply don't care

    fine. hurray for you

    but don't assume that therefore your opinion matters to those of us who do care about the fate of our ecosystems

    you simply don't matter. you are inert. you are a loud ignorant voice

    and you are ignored

    but keep up with the trolling anyways, everyone needs comic relief
  • by American AC in Paris ( 230456 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:34PM (#17227082) Homepage
    The more sensitive among us might think this is a bad thing but it frees up resources for the fittest to become even fitter.

    What makes you think that we homo sapiens fall into the "fittest" category in this case?

    What makes you think we've got a better shot at making "the cut" than trees, grass, rats, corn, ants, plankton, robins, mushrooms, or (the perennial favorite) cockroaches?

    If your answer is "because we're intelligent", ask yourself why the dolphins died out before the insects in this particular area. For as awesome as we are, we're not nearly as well-equipped to battle extinction by environment change as we'd like to think.

  • by mpapet ( 761907 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:37PM (#17227140) Homepage
    Sometimes stuff dies.
    Marginalizing an important issue like biodiversity is fun isn't it?

    This is /. where software monoculture is almost universally agreed is a Bad Thing(r).

    It stands to reason a biologic monoculture carries with it even more dire consequences than software. Our best interests are served to ensure there are as many species as possible walking/crawling/swimming around.

    Let me give you an example. Bees. The American commercial bee population is a monoculture. In California the central valley bee population has been decimated by a disease that the bee keepers can no longer control. Guess what? No tree nut harvest. How about the other plants that bees pollinate? http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story Id=6299480 [npr.org]

    Now, what happens when it's cows or corn? Rice? Wheat? Please re-examine this belief carefully and mod parent down.
  • by DigitalRaptor ( 815681 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:39PM (#17227186)
    OK, so it's natural selection.

    The problem is this: We can pick our actions. We cannot pick their consequences.

    Anyone who thinks humans can't have an impact on the environment have their heads so far up their butts that the lump in their throat is their nose.

    Our actions or lack of actions do have consequences, and we do have to live with those consequences.

    I have no idea what the consequence of this species being lost will be, but I guarantee there will be consequences, and doubt very highly that they will be positive and produce a net gain in the world.

  • by bogjobber ( 880402 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:48PM (#17227354)

    The difference between man and the "natural world" is poetic, not scientific. It is a romantic view, and it is irrational. We view nature as everything other than what we have created. Whenever we talk about nature, it is usually associated with the good and man is associated with the bad. However, when speaking of a scientific phenomenon such as natural selection it is stupid to separate man and nature. We are part of the ecosystem just like every other animal. The "destruction of nature" IMO is only dangerous as far as it affects us. The world is a cruel and harsh place, with or without humans. Extinction happens. Life on Earth was here long before we emerged, and it will be here long after we are gone.

  • by David_Shultz ( 750615 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:49PM (#17227372)
    oh yea, and what's natural is good right? Like rape and murder? Thanks dr.Morality, you have staightened me right out!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:51PM (#17227408)
    Survival of the fittest FTW!
  • by jd ( 1658 ) <[moc.oohay] [ta] [kapimi]> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @03:58PM (#17227524) Homepage Journal
    • The dolphin was officially down to 6 or less a decade ago.
    • It was featured in Douglas Adams' "Last Chance To See" as critically endangered sometime before that.
    • The two that the Chinese had in captivity died due to neglect and the use of exactly the kind of netting that have been killing them along the river for containment.
    • The problem with fishing was not limited to overfishing - there are plenty of fish upriver of the dam. The problem was that the Chinese saw no point in allowing the dolphins and the fish to be in the same stretch of river.
    • The Chinese could - very easily - have moved the dolphins upriver of the dam, getting them out of the way of boats, pollution, etc. The decision not to do so had nothing to do with capability, money, resources, fish, pollution, or any other such problem. The decision not to was based on apathy.
    • The environmentalists were equally capable of moving the dolphins. The politicians could hardly have stopped them - even if they wanted to. And why would they have wanted to? It would have gotten rid of the problem, would have allowed them to claim credit if the solution worked, and would have cost them nothing if it had failed.
    • Environmentalists were equally capable of relocating the dolphins. There's so much boat traffic and so much illegal fishing, who would have noticed the Rainbow Warrior flooding a compartment and stuffing a few dolphins in it? The dolphins need a fresh water river and there's not exactly a world shortage of those.
    • And the marine parks around the world? They could have charged a small fortune to exhibit a river dolphin, run a captive breeding program and got their name in lights for saving an entire species. So what do they do? Uh.... Nothing?
    • Gene banks and cloning groups? Silent. No efforts on saving the genetic data for later generations, no efforts by geneticists to produce a clone, not even an effort to map the genes to see what made them what they were. (Wheat you can find next year. Humans will be around for a loong time. But the plants and animals that you get one chance at and that's it?)


    I have to give credit where credit is due, though. The stupidity of all the organizations - from Greenpeace to the Chinese Government - that could have made a difference but chose not to make a difference that mattered is not the mundane stupidity we see in everyday life. This is a highly trained, highly refined breed of stupidity that only the truly gifted hand-wringer could develop.

  • by nine-times ( 778537 ) <nine.times@gmail.com> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:00PM (#17227578) Homepage

    If ALL selection were natural selection, there wouldn't be any point in coining the term 'natural selection' instead you would use the word 'selection'.

    Well, the "natural" part of "natural selection" is supposed to mean that it isn't purposefully chosen. It's meant to run parallel but contrast with the breeding of animals for specific purposes.

  • Re:Overloards (Score:1, Insightful)

    by pseudorand ( 603231 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:00PM (#17227580)
    Sorry, it was a vein attempt at a firstpost and all I could think of on short notice. Feel free to mod it into the abyss.
  • Re:Oops! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:08PM (#17227730)
    So if we're going to feel bad about something, feel bad that some Chinese kid had food to eat and could go places.
  • Re:Overloards (Score:2, Insightful)

    by GeckoX ( 259575 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:17PM (#17227892)
    It wasn't really the post itself, it's that it was modded up to the top of the pile so fast and considering what the article is about, I find that sad.

    I find it even more sad that people would view this opinion as being a troll.

    There is simply nothing amusing about the extinction of a species, but considering how most of the ensuing discussions have gone, I really shouldn't be remotely surprised.

    The average IQ around here may be higher than most places, but it sure doesn't equate to higher morality. (Now that could be legitimately called a troll, though it is true)
  • by Diamon ( 13013 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:21PM (#17227960)
    TFA calls the Baiji "functionally extinct" and "effectively extinct" is there some sort of "non-functioning extinction" or "ineffective extinction"? They're either extinct, or not extinct (with a possible "believed to be extinct" and maybe even "extinct in the wild") why must people muddy things up with unnecessary qualifiers that add nothing to the facts?
  • Re:Overloards (Score:3, Insightful)

    by szembek ( 948327 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:23PM (#17228000) Homepage
    If people didn't make inappropriate jokes, the Internet wouldn't be what it is.
  • by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:30PM (#17228116)
    As for this issue, let's stick to morality, since this is a moral issue.

    Um, just to clarify a few things, please lay out your moral framework, as it relates to which living creatures it's OK to kill, and by what means. If it's a moral issue, that should be very simple for you to describe, since surely you're not basing that notion on any mixed premises or anything.

    Are you a vegan? And if so, what steps are you taking to make sure that a particular sub-species of earthworm that lives only in a little valley where thin, pale-looking organic farmers use ox-drawn iron-age plows to greenly raise the plants from which your Thanksgiving tofurkey was molded are all cut to ribbons in the process? You could be partly responsible for wormicide.

    Or, do your moral considerations vary as a function of animal cuteness or whether or not it was portrayed as good or evil in Narnia?

    I hate to see anything extinct, and wish that Giant Cave Bears still existed to eat granola-crunching naturalists that talk to trees on a first name basis, but you'd better be careful about the distinction between "dumb" and "immoral." Because once you cast the damage or support done to/for a particular species in moral terms, you're into some deep water. That is, if you have any intellectual honesty whatsoever.
  • by circletimessquare ( 444983 ) <{circletimessquare} {at} {gmail.com}> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:32PM (#17228144) Homepage Journal
    by your same logic, if i murder you, it's a natural act

    so therefore, i should not be held accountable, right?

    accountability and responsibility: what do those concepts mean to you?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:37PM (#17228216)
    Nature is what it is - it is not possible to be outside of it. More correct might be to say "nature as it would exist in the absence of human beings." "humanities selective proclivities" ARE merely part of nature, in the strict sense.

    Nature doesn't "care" about anything in any sense - the only rule of the game is survival. The best surviver survives, and if the conditions change its adapt or die. Very simple.

    Human adapted well, and we run the show now. If something evolves to take us out, then it is a more effective survivor than we are. Etc. etc. etc. Diversity is not valued in nature except in that it helps promote survival.

    Our emotions have nothing to do with nature as a system. It is what it is, period. No feelings, just existance and survival. Anything else is viewing it in a false light.

    What we DO want to ask is can we make better use of the diversity in nature to educate and help ourselves, or perhaps avoid shooting our environment in its metaphorical foot. Sentimental attachment to nature for its own sake completely misses the point of nature, which is first, last and only survival. If we like something we can try to preserve it, but then it is no longer a survivor except by our whim, which is not safe.

    Caution is appropriate in situations where the consequences are severe and difficult to reverse, but that is still rational self interest on the part of human beings. Since short term survival trumps everything, nature-apart-from-man is doomed (indeed its probably already gone except maybe in the deep oceans.)
  • by xappax ( 876447 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:44PM (#17228326)
    I say we focus on those instead of crying over what is essentially a sad but unimportant story.

    Did it occur to you that bee monoculture was a problem until you read that story? Yeah, me neither. See that's the problem. If we could tell which species and ecosystems were important to protect, I'd be right behind you: "pay attention to the ones that matter, and who gives a fuck about the rest?!?!"

    But the problem is, we don't know what the hell we're doing. We don't know what species are important, what environmental variables do what, and we generally don't find out until things have gotten out of hand and shit like entire species have been destroyed. You can find innumerable examples where a seemingly insignificant change in an environment caused some fairly significant and harmful cascade.

    Because we don't understand exactly how ecosystems work yet, we're limited to leaving them mostly alone and keeping them the way they are, because as every programmer knows, getting excited and trying to fiddle with a system you don't understand frequently leads to a crash. And unlike on a computer, we can't just reboot the planet.
  • Re:Overloards (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Lord_Dweomer ( 648696 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:53PM (#17228434) Homepage
    I don't see how you can make wild assumptions about the morality of the /. user-base from observing many people who obviously have a different sense of humor than you do making jokes. Its called grave humor and it applies to anything sad. Does this suck? YES. Big time. But making a joke about it does not lessen the seriousness of it, it just lets us have a much needed chuckle.

    Try pulling the stick out of your ass before you go judging others.

  • by deesine ( 722173 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @04:56PM (#17228488)
    buzzkills with a diminished sense of humor, like yourself.
  • Re:Overloards (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Profane MuthaFucka ( 574406 ) <busheatskok@gmail.com> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:03PM (#17228606) Homepage Journal
    OK, I'm going to call this for bullshit. I don't agree that joking about a dolphin's extinction is a sign of morality or immorality. The fact that someone made a wisecrack about it here doesn't mean that he is immoral. Joking about something is morally neutral. Nobody and no thing is harmed by that joke being made about the dolphin's extinction.

    It's just a smokescreen to deflect guilt. Making others feel guilty about cracking a joke is just a way to feel less bad about our own roles in the extinction of a species. "No Single Drop Believes it is Responsible for the Flood". We're all to blame for this, and it shows what fucking rotten stewards of this planet we have been.

  • Re:Oops! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Keebler71 ( 520908 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:07PM (#17228656) Journal
    They were done in by the increasing pollution of that river. So instead of feeling bad about the tuna sandwiches you had you should feel bad about the cheap DVD player you bought -- not only did the people who put it together get paid slave wages,...

    Are you implying that I should feel bad about buying something that creates a job in a part of the world that desperately needs them? What is a slave wage to you may be a godsend to the worker. To quote Sowell [wikipedia.org]: "The real minimum wage is zero [unemployment]."

  • by ArcherB ( 796902 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:14PM (#17228746) Journal
    *Successful* parasites don't kill the host...we on the other hand are doing are best to kill the earth, our 'host'.

    I have yet to see a parasite anywhere that gives a rats ass about its host. For that matter, I've never seen any animal care about its effect on the environment. So, say what you will about man, but we are the only species on the planet that cares for other species (pets, PETA, conservation organizations and so on), recognizes its own impact on the environment and tries to do something about it (futile or not). So before you go "man-bashing", tell me of any other creature anywhere that would take a single step to save another species from extinction.

  • known to exist (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Orig_Club_Soda ( 983823 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:16PM (#17228776) Journal
    believed to have existed...
  • Re:Oops! (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:19PM (#17228834)
    First you assume that the readership of Slashdot consists of 'geeks,' and secondly that 'geeks' do not engage in 'knee-jerk' responses. I see no reason to think that either assumption is true, and further that 'geek' is such a nebulous concept in the popular vernacular as to be essentially meaningless. You'll notice that anyone with a hobby refers to himself as a 'geek' since the later '90s. From people that play video games to people that watch movies, everyone is a 'geek.' Even more importantly, the people that post to Slashdot are not particularly impressive specimens intellectually, and I see ample evidence every day that 'knee-jerking' is precisely what is done in these parts. You're lucky if people even read past the headline before making comments.
  • by izomiac ( 815208 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:22PM (#17228896) Homepage
    I figure that we could handle environmental changes far better than most species. First of all, we have considerable intelligence and tools that extend our "natural" adaptability. Second, how many other animals can thrive on 6 of the 7 continents (or all 7 if you let people use tools)? Third, we can eat a fairly varied diet, so our survival isn't dependent on any specific prey. Fourth, our population is enormous compared to the minimum number needed to sustain the species (i.e. not enter an extinction spiral/cascade). If 5 billion of us were to instantly just fall over dead, the human species still wouldn't be threatened with extinction. Of course, a significant climate change probably would kill a bunch of people, and make life kinda suck for the survivors, so it's in our best interest to prevent that from happening. Extinction is probably impossible for humans unless we do something really dumb, like ignite the atmosphere or create some super virus.
  • Re:I agree. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Irvu ( 248207 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:40PM (#17229138)
    Quite easily when that species inclides arctic seals that use Ice to protect them from attacks, and as a resting place. Or aquatic species such as Polar bears which live and hunt on said ice. One shouldn't ignore whales which also make heavy use of it in their survival. Then again perhaps they're mythical, or legendary.

  • by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @05:49PM (#17229254)
    Um, just to clarify things, people who hunt are sadists.

    Never met one. Every hunter I know goes to a lot of trouble to make sure that the animals they eat - which live in the wild and pretty much never die of old age - meet a rather instantaneous end. Do you eat fish? When was the last time you saw to it that your salmon had a nice peaceful death, or a completely abrupt one? Hooking or netting a fish is a painful, panicky thing, just like capturing crabs, or running cattle into a chute for slaughter. I take very seriously my opportunity and responsibility to take wild game in an ethical manner.

    I also participate in keeping the eastern seaboard whitetail deer population under control. Since the natural predators are gone from suburbia, and such developments create ideal deer habitat, you wind up with many times the population of deer that were present even 300 years ago. When poor weather happens, or during the rut, you get vast number of these animals moving across highways or gathering in unnatually large herds. The result is painful (and sometimes drawn-out) death by injury from a vehicle, or very high rates of disease transmission from over crowding. People who want deer to live like that are sadists (to use your word). People who take the role that wolves used to play (in keeping the herds properly thinned out) not only are doing the species a service, but are also putting into their freezers some very healthy, lean meat that isn't soaked in steroids and anti-biotics, and which didn't involve huge farming operations (which burn tons of fuel and drench the soil with fertalizers) to raise and transport. While performing this little service, we (hunters) also pay large sums of money into state coffers, and support all sorts of wildlife conservation programs. Hunters do more to ensure the long term viability of wildlife (from ducks to deer to foxes and wild turkey) than most any other group.

    Since you so obviously want everyone to know that you are a sadist you must be even more deranged than the average hunter.

    Says the anonymous coward.

    I'm more than happy to tell people where the holiday meal they're eating came from. In my family, it's nice pheasant appetizers followed by a really good venison roast. All taken by me, in the field, while on my two feet. While I'm at it, I pick up trash, dispose of old abandoned barbwire, report poachers to the game wardens, tell farmers what I've seen on their back 40, and reduce - by at least a few meals - the demand for factory farming and all of the waste that goes with it.

    So, since you're a vegetarian, tell me everything you know about how the soybean farmers you buy from don't ever shoot the varmits that dig holes in their crop sections. Tell me how they tuck each groundhog and jackrabbit into bed every night. Do you sleep better at night knowing that the farmers you deal with use special combines that are guaranteed not to slowly crush voles, mice, and other small mammals as they drive over those animals' home turf? Oops! I forgot. That's simply not true, is it? Tell me what you know about the "organic" operations that, none the less, still practice ditch-to-ditch farming, thus reducing the very habitat that would provide homes for grouse or quail. You know, nature's little pest-bug patrol. In fact, tell me what you know about any of this whatsoever, since your previous comment would imply that you're an ignorant fool that thinks all food is produced by extracting it from rainbows, and delivered by My Little Pony to your grocery store. Hunters aren't sadists. But people who eat meat and wear leather without every personally doing the work of producing it are: cowards (and usually shrill, hypocritical asses, as well).
  • Re:Oops! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Conanymous Award ( 597667 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @06:03PM (#17229468)
    I honestly must say I don't give a rats ass if somebody loses his/her job now because we have to protect a unique species from going extinct. Sheesh, 20 million years of succesful living as a species, and now you're dead because of someone who lives for, say, 60 years. Sad. We are indeed a pathetic species.
  • by Lord Ender ( 156273 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @06:13PM (#17229596) Homepage
    The species which is closest to colonizing space is the fittest. We are the only species with a space program. We are the fittest.

  • Re:Oops! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by operagost ( 62405 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @06:16PM (#17229662) Homepage Journal

    Sheesh, 20 million years of succesful living as a species, and now you're dead because of someone who lives for, say, 60 years.
    Wow, isn't that a heavily weighted argument. Can't really make a single individual's lifespan stand against the entire existence of a species. For your next act, I hope you will advocate razing all steel-framed buildings in favor of adobe huts because steel buildings last, say, 60 years, while adobe huts have been build for thousands.
  • Re:Overloards (Score:2, Insightful)

    by operagost ( 62405 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @06:24PM (#17229750) Homepage Journal
    Your overreaction is certainly amusing.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @06:34PM (#17229890)
    >The problem with fishing was not limited to overfishing - >there are plenty of fish upriver of the dam. The problem >was that the Chinese saw no point in allowing the dolphins >and the fish to be in the same stretch of river.

    Plentiful "fish upriver of the dam" is a myth. Do you know how big the Three Rivers dam is and the amount of urban and industrial pollution that continues in its proximity, upstream and downstream?

    >The Chinese could - very easily - have moved the dolphins upriver of the dam, getting them out of the way of boats, pollution, etc. The decision not to do so had nothing to do with capability, money, resources, fish, pollution, or any other such problem. The decision not to was based on apathy.

    Nothing's free. Transport of dolphins and cetaceans is more difficult then it sounds. The dolphins first have to be tranquilized, I believe. Then the dolphin movers use a special cloth harness, straps and suspension mechanism to keep their weight evenly distributed. You sound like a racist saying it's none of the above reasons but apathy.

    >The environmentalists were equally capable of moving the dolphins.

    It takes money fool.
  • Re:Oops! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by SatanicPuppy ( 611928 ) * <Satanicpuppy@OPENBSDgmail.com minus bsd> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @06:49PM (#17230084) Journal
    Nothing valuable-as-money, that is true, but there are other things than money.

    There is intrinsic value in all living things, and while I'm no flaming hippy, who values individual fuzzy things more than people, I think that the careless extermination of an entire species, for no better reason than that the Chinese can't be bothered to not exterminate it, is a bad thing.
  • by ricree ( 969643 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @07:59PM (#17230824)
    Now if that species had adapted to being eaten by humans by evolving to be less... edible... then it would have survived.
    Actually, the opposite is pretty much true. As far as evolutionary strategies go, being a species that humans like to eat has proven quite successful. Look at wheat or corn, for example. Humans clear vast tracts of land for the sole purpose of allowing these species to propagate. Chickens, cows, pigs, etc are all doing very good in evolutionary terms because we like to eat them. Maybe the dodo should have become more edible, rather than less.
  • Re:Oops! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by homer_ca ( 144738 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @08:25PM (#17231050)
    By tasty animals, I'm guessing you're talking about the various varieties of bland, factory-farmed livestock. There's just a small problem with that called biodiversity. When you have a monoculture of a certain crop or livestock, all it takes is one plague to wipe them out all around the world.
  • by dghcasp ( 459766 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @08:31PM (#17231090)

    The only animals that matter are the cow, the pig, and the chicken. They'll never go extinct from environmental factors because we humans have taken over their care and feeding (and eating.)

    There may be a moral argument for keeping a species from extinction, but there's usually a financial argument for killing just one more. Every time a poacher kills an Elephant, his family gets to eat, or he gets to buy a new car. There will always be people for which finance trumps morals. The rain forests aren't being cleared because people hate trees, it's because they need more room for cows, pigs, and chickens.

    Personally, I'm sad to see another species go extinct, but in reality, it will have no impact on my life that there are no more white dolphins in China.

  • Cob /Adobe (Score:2, Insightful)

    by jonskerr ( 217459 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @08:34PM (#17231118) Homepage
    I, for one, welcome our new natural overlords. I would certainly advocate razing (and recycling the steel) when these buildings wear out and replacing them with earthen buildings. Also wooden buildings should also be supplanted with earthen ones when their time is up. Cob and adobe last way longer, takes way less energy to create the materials (straw, sand and clay) and won't be destroyed by california's wildfires, and if built with a concrete pad in the foundation will also stand up to earthquakes. And I could quit my bullshit cubicle job and go be a cobber or adobe builder. Everybody wins!

    Jon
  • Re:Oops! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by DeathElk ( 883654 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @09:37PM (#17231650)
    This is un-natural selection. Big difference.
  • by Profound ( 50789 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @09:56PM (#17231768) Homepage
    Tragedy of the commons...

    Complex organisms that have evolved over millions of years are not just externalities! Hopefully before too long humans will realise that breeding populations of genes have immense value, even for purely selfish reasons.
  • Re:Oops! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @10:12PM (#17231864) Homepage Journal

    Every time a land developer gets told they can't build something on land that they paid for because it's habitat of some obscure and largely irrelevant species, that's costing someone tons of money, the burden of which is borne by a few individuals. IMHO, that burden should be shared by all. If land is declared unbuildable because of endangered species laws, it should be mandatory that the government purchase that land at fair market value. In that way, everyone pays their fair share instead of a few people getting screwed.

    I say this as someone about to buy property in California, desperately terrified that I'll be told halfway through the project that they found some species I've never heard of and I'll lose every penny I have. And therein lies the flip side of the argument. Everything has its price, and that price when viewed in abstract terms (100 less jobs) seems small until you see it in more concrete terms (40 people are now homeless because they can't afford a roof over their heads). The key is balance.

  • Re:Oops! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by noamsml ( 868075 ) <noamsmlNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @10:16PM (#17231902) Homepage
    I can believe that a rock is falling onto my head, but it doesn't keep me from avoiding it. The simple fact that evolution and natural selection are integral parts of life does not mean that a sentient being cannot defy the drive to survive or extinguish competing species. In fact, such sentient decisions are also part of natural selection.

    The name itself, "natural selection", is somewhat misleading. Natural selection does not imply lack of human intervention. On the contrary, humans are part of, influence, are influenced by, and are subject to natural selection and evolution. Therefore, you are wrong to think that natural selection is only such if we stand aside and let nature do its will. That is the fallacy of the Social Darwinist as Divine Right Theorist: Success must take intervention and attempts of change into account in order for it to be truly objective.

    Sorry, I went on a limb there, didn't I?

  • Re:Oops! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @11:05PM (#17232288)
    And to those who would claim that human life is more precious than animal life... why?

    These are some example questions. Assume you're on vacation far away and none of this causes you any direct physical harm. Now the questions:

    - Say there's going to be a huge tragedy and someone's family is going to die. If you could chose whether your family dies or someone other family dies, which would you choose?

    - Say there's going to be a huge accident and a whole town or city is going to be destroyed (comet, bomb, whatever)? Do you want it to be the town where you live, or some other town?

    - Say there's going to be a plague and a whole nation is going to die from it. It will be everyone who speaks a particular language. Do you want it to be your people, or some others?

    Are you getting it yet? It's pretty obvious. Everyone else understands the point implicitly -- all the rational ones anyway. It's OK if you're not. Be insane all you want. Just stop recruiting.
  • Re:Oops! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ganhawk ( 703420 ) on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @11:42PM (#17232530)

    "Face it, humans are just animals, and their lives are no more important (other than in the thoughts of their friends/relatives) than the lives of animals."

    Important to whom ? Lives of humans are more important *to humans* than the lives of other animals. It is simply because they are human and hence we have higher empathy towards humans than animals. If this is embodied in religion or law (killing another human is far greater crime than killing an animal), it must simply because of the higher empathy we feel towards humans.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 13, 2006 @11:55PM (#17232604)
    To be perfectly fair, not all people who don't kill their own food are cowards or shrill, hypocritical asses. I personally don't go deer hunting because it's early and cold. If I'm awake at 5 in the morning, I better have a better reason than going outside and standing in the snow. I don't have a problem with killing my food, I've done it many times with fish and fowl.

    (Note: Not the dumbass AC)
  • Re:Oops! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by scotch ( 102596 ) on Thursday December 14, 2006 @01:02AM (#17232962) Homepage
    What's the "fair market value" of the land that you can't build on?
  • by LarsWestergren ( 9033 ) on Thursday December 14, 2006 @03:27AM (#17233476) Homepage Journal
    The only animals that matter are the cow, the pig, and the chicken. They'll never go extinct from environmental factors because we humans have taken over their care and feeding (and eating.)

    If you really believe that, you are staggeringly ignorant. Don't you think plants need insects to pollinate them, birds to spread their seeds for instance? Good luck feeding the cows, pigs and chickens without the plants. But even if you are only talking about large animals, biodiversity is important and more fragile than people think. Go pick up a introductory textbook in biology.

    As you say, there are moral arguments to keeping animals alive. But even if someone is a Lombergian psychopath who only is able to appreciate things for their absolute monetary value, there is a huge amount of stuff we can still learn from the DNA, chemistry and physiology of animals that are to direct use to us.

  • Re:Oops! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 14, 2006 @08:17AM (#17234576)
    What's the "fair market value" of a unique species? What's the replacement cost?

    And it sounds like you're mostly afraid of getting financially burned by the "unknown", which is a reasonable concern. So, do the obvious fix: do an environmental impact study, including a field study of the flora and fauna, *BEFORE* you put up your money to buy the land, so that you *know* it isn't an issue. Think of it as insurance. You probably wouldn't think twice about a home inspection before buying it. Why not a "land inspection"? Especially in California, such an inspection can cover multiple risks and protect you from being hung out to dry because you bought a piece of land with a geological hazard on it that wasn't obvious either -- landslides [usgs.gov] are *really* [csulb.edu] common [wikipedia.org] in California [insurancejournal.com], for example, and have ruined alot of poorly-planned developments and killed unsuspecting residents [usgs.gov], EVEN when there were warning signs preceding the deadly events.

    Basically, don't get financially ruined (or worse) by the unknown. This is not rocket science. Some risks can be mitigated by a bit of study, and if that takes a bit of money and time, it is worth it if you are spending hundreds or thousands of times more on the land itself, and your financial neck is on the line. Make the risks known.

To the systems programmer, users and applications serve only to provide a test load.

Working...