Man-Made Fire Blamed for Australian Extinctions 52
JeiFuRi writes "Around 50,000 years ago, many large Australian animals died off with the arrival of man. From a study carried out by the Carnegie Institution, we now know that the continent's earliest settlers caused these extinctions through their use of fire. In addition, it may have altered the ecosystem of ancient Australia and brought about it's collapse. Futher commentary at BBC News, newKerala, and Red Nova." "Know" is a strong word; the study suggests this may be the case, though.
Re:Know is the right word! (Score:3, Funny)
"Now kids - remember, when cooking animals, make sure they're dead *before* you set them on fire, or otherwise they might run away and set the entire continent on fire"
"Gee, thanks GI Aboriginal Tribesman!"
"Now you know - and knowing is half the battle! Now lets set that Dingo on fire."
Re:Know is the right word! (Score:2)
A dead kookaburra is funnier.
Thats evolution for you (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously though , Such is evolution
I always had a small problem with conservation efforts , I know its lovely to save endangered species and all that , but does it not hamper the natural order further by trying to save species that can not cope by themselves.
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:3, Insightful)
Leopards and lions aren't obsessed with hunting elephants just to get at their tusks.
When it's a matter of survival, rather than fetching a good price on the black market - let me know.
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2, Interesting)
This is a matter of survival , If elephants are being wiped off the face of the earth as they can't cope with the hunting habits of humans is that not natural selection.
OK it could be argued that being cute is an evolutionary advantage as humans get sympathetic and try to save the species
We are a part of nature , and we are very much on the top of the food chain right now
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2, Interesting)
We combat diseases that are supposed to be effective as population-control (yes, yes I know, I'm a sinister/twisted person).
We take more from nature than we need.
Maybe Agent Smith wasn't all that wrong in his statement about humans being parasites.
I guess my main problem is that the animals in danger of extinction are the wrong animals.
Mosquitos, flies, cockroaches etc.. Get rid of 'em!
Just don't touch my cuddly stoned koalas with sh
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2)
Some parts of nature went for fearsome power , speed , teeth and claws that can eviscerate anything not made of stone and another part went for lazy and cute
Now look how well the gunny pig is doing compared to some of the big cats , coincidence
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2)
Not dissimilarly to the analogous functions of the United States in world politics, Wal*Mart in retaul economics or Microsoft in the world of software sales.
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2)
That Darwinian view tends to be OK for others. It's when we ourselves are hit thereby that we seek work-arounds.
Necessity mothers both invention and unintended consequences.
I think Jeremiah Cornelius's response in this thread that human beings are a 'cancer' in the 'cell' of the world misses some of the more obvious feedback loops in play, like war and falling birthrates.
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2)
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:1)
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:1)
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2)
How do you save an indangered species? Let people eat it. Then it will be farmed and man will make sure that it is not wiped out.
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2)
- Paul Erlich
Second argument, the easter Island scenario: a willful disregard for
all them other critters might cause us to make things hard on
ourselves at some point, through unintended consequences.
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2)
The bottom line is that the closest we can get to "farming" of elephants is to have wild-life preserves where they can grow on their own and will not be killed by humans.
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:1)
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2)
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:1)
The problem is that man has bested evolution. Our smarts are much faster than it can ever be. We're an 'out-of-context' problem. The consequences of our actions come by much quicker than evolution can compensate.
So in less than a blink, on evolution's time scale, *poof*, wooly mamouths hunted to extinction, *poof*, no more Amazon rainforest, etc...
Re:Thats evolution for you (Score:2)
Don't bite the hand that feeds you (Score:2)
I would say it's more like one large species wiped out 80% of the other large species because it seemed like a good idea at the time.
"I always had a small problem with conservation efforts , I know its lovely to save endangered species and all that , but does it not hamper the natural order further by trying to save species that can not cope by themselves."
No species can cope by itself except perhaps some single cell organisims, but certain
Yay, I mean, boo! (Score:2, Funny)
Its bloody hot down there. (Score:5, Interesting)
I've survived many a bush fire with nothing but a damp potato sack for my miseries, and much as I despise the negative impact we've had on this land, I can tell you that its a beautiful thing indeed to walk around the scorched Aussie landscape for weeks after the event, watching new life grow
Australia is a beautiful place, so truly uniqe. Its a good thing that, at least, we are discussing its management, and our effect, and the demise so far, intelligently at least
Re:Its bloody hot down there. (Score:2)
Man, you Aussies are a friggin' tough bunch, aren't you?
Re:Hello Editors! (Score:1, Informative)
Only you... (Score:5, Funny)
Pyro the Aboriginie says: "Mmm, marsupial tasty over fire. More burnt marsupials good. Burn! Burn!"
*sets outback on fire*
Re:Only you... (Score:2)
Homo sapiens: The Other Species (Score:1, Insightful)
Again, I do not condone charging ahead to flatten forests or eliminate other species but it seems strange one never hears discussion of things in this light....
Re:Homo sapiens: The Other Species (Score:5, Insightful)
So are mass extinctions, but if given the choice you'd generally prefer not to be involved in one of those.
We're supposed to be the intelligent ones here, but we don't appear to be smart enough yet not to shit in our own beds...
Re:Homo sapiens: The Other Species (Score:2)
Is man above nature or part of it.
If we are above it then we have an obligation and the right to manage it.
If we are part of it then what ever we feel like is "right".
As far as being part of extinctions. Do you know that some people feel that humans do not have the "right" to wipe out the smallpox virus? What about Polio? How about Aids? Frankly there are some life forms that I am all for making extinct.
Re:Homo sapiens: The Other Species (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Homo sapiens: The Other Species (Score:1)
Main Entry: artificial
Pronunciation: "är-t&-'fi-sh&l
Function: adjective
1 : humanly contrived often on a natural model : MAN-MADE
2 a : having existence in legal, economic, or political theory b : caused or produced by a human and especially social or political agency
3 obsolete : ARTFUL, CUNNING
4 a : lacking in natural or spontaneous quality b : IMITATION
Re:Homo sapiens: The Other Species (Score:1)
If all Artificial things are in the set of Man-made things, and all Artificial things are in the set of Imitation things, then all Man-made things are in the set of Imitation things? Thats a classic fallacy, and one which I had assumed most people were done with.
all A in M
all A in I
Does NOT imply all M in I!
Re:Homo sapiens: The Other Species (Score:2)
We have so far acted "naturally", (we have done what humans do), and are now much closer to the "natural" consequence of our behaviour than ever before. I suspect that if humans do not adapt thier "nature" to suit the "natural order" then rapid human exitinction will be the "natural" outcome.
I agree with you that not
Why not non-human causes? (Score:1, Interesting)
Because a lot of the countryside around the world has this alarming habbit of setting itself on fire. In the middle of the dry season, all it takes is one
Re:Why not non-human causes? (Score:3, Informative)
Occam's Razor. (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem is that it is never just as simple as one correct answer. Sure the Aborigines changed things by using fire and importing dogs (not to mention snacking on giant wombats who had never seen a hungry human), but
What about natural fires? (Score:1)