Unbelievable Stats on Climate Change

in #ecotrain5 years ago (edited)

3%. 3% of all earth’s land animals are wild anymore. The remaining 97% are humans and their livestock & pets. We are literally taking over the earth and causing animals our grandparents grew up with to go extinct. 40% of insects have already gone extinct. This is due to conventional farming practices (read pesticides and herbicides), deforestation, habitat destruction and warming air and waters. Our sheer numbers and consumption habits are wreaking havoc (single use plastic was recently found at the deepest trench in the ocean and inside seabird egg yolks at the northern most isolated arctic.) As everything is interconnected and human reach is so vast, our actions intimately and more and more quickly impact all of life on the planet. Now is the time to simplify & drastically scale down consumption, buy used durable goods we can use for a long time, grow your own organic food or know your farmer who does, stop using plastic in favor of wood, glass or metal and simplify simplify simplify. Downscale. Share. Barter. Create. Rampant consumption is not a sign of wealth or progress, it’s actually more quickly devastating our planet and everything on it. Throwaway culture is the death of us all.

Yesterday I shared this soundbite on Instagram with a picture of our little cabin in the woods. (We finally got a wee bit of snow!)

I was surprised at some of the "backlash". Multiple people found the facts I shared unbelievable, one even going so far to call them delusional, and while the gram isn't link friendly, writing a blog post sure is.

Perhaps you all will find these statistics on climate change and human related impact hard to believe as well. If so, keep reading and I welcome your feedback in the comments.

Breakin' It Down

3%. 3% of all earth’s land animals are wild anymore. The remaining 97% are humans and their livestock & pets.

This stat came from this article in The Atlantic, Earth Is Not in the Midst of a Sixth Mass Extinction.

Our destruction is so familiar—so synonymous with civilization—in fact, that we tend to overlook how strange the world that we’ve made has become. For instance, it stands to reason that, until very recently, all vertebrate life on the planet was wildlife. But astoundingly, today wildlife accounts for only 3 percent of earth’s land animals; human beings, our livestock, and our pets take up the remaining 97 percent of the biomass. This Frankenstein biosphere is due both to the explosion of industrial agriculture and to a hollowing out of wildlife itself, which has decreased in abundance by as much as 50 percent since 1970. This cull is from both direct hunting and global-scale habitat destruction: almost half of the earth’s land has been converted to farmland.

40% of insects have already gone extinct.

This stat was from this article in The Guardian, Plummeting insect numbers 'threaten collapse of nature'.

More than 40% of insect species are declining and a third are endangered, the analysis found. The rate of extinction is eight times faster than that of mammals, birds and reptiles. The total mass of insects is falling by a precipitous 2.5% a year, according to the best data available, suggesting they could vanish within a century.


The new analysis selected the 73 best studies done to date to assess the insect decline. Butterflies and moths are among the worst hit. For example, the number of widespread butterfly species fell by 58% on farmed land in England between 2000 and 2009. The UK has suffered the biggest recorded insect falls overall, though that is probably a result of being more intensely studied than most places.

So it seems my statement that 40% have already gone extinct was incorrect. Rather, they're on the verge of going extinct. Either way you slice it, news like this is not positive and we need to start creating pollinator habitats while we stop destroying the wilds and curb pesticide and herbicide use.

The 2.5% rate of annual loss over the last 25-30 years is “shocking”, Sánchez-Bayo told the Guardian: “It is very rapid. In 10 years you will have a quarter less, in 50 years only half left and in 100 years you will have none.”

Our sheer numbers and consumption habits are wreaking havoc (single use plastic was recently found at the deepest trench in the ocean and inside seabird egg yolks at the northern most isolated arctic.)

You all already know about the Mariana trench from an article I did earlier in the week and the egg yolk fact came from this article Plastic chemicals discovered inside bird eggs from remote Arctic.

Chemicals from plastics have been found inside the eggs of seabirds living in remote Arctic colonies, in the latest sign of pollution contaminating the furthest reaches of the planet.

Scientists were concerned by the traces of phthalates, hormone-disrupting chemicals that have been banned from children’s toys due to their potential “gender-bending” effects.

These substances are routinely applied to many plastic products, and probably came from the bottle tops and cigarette butts these seabirds often eat after mistaking them for food.

The eggs were taken from northern fulmars living on an island in Lancaster Sound, more than 100 miles away from the nearest human settlement.

In a preliminary study, Dr Jennifer Provencher of the Canadian Wildlife Service tested the eggs of five fulmars and found phthalates in one, but warned the problem is likely to be far more pervasive.

“These are some of the birds who have the lowest levels of accumulated plastic,” explained Dr Provencher.

Conclusion

While I misrepresented the statistic on the insects, the rest of them stand affirmed. I find these stats unbelievable as well and it's shocking to have people who read these demanding that I prove the veracity of my writing simply because the stats themselves are so controversial.

Yet on the other hand it's not shocking at all. A large group of humans remain "climate change deniers" and they make it a political issue obfuscating the very realities that we need to heed in order to act accordingly.

It's always so odd to me that people deny that this stuff is going on or get lost in the minutiae. One could go on and on sharing alarming and disheartening studies revealing the state of things facing our world and all of its inhabitants.

Most of us ignore finding the details out about this information because it's too difficult to take in.

It really is as bad as the scientists confirming it are now saying. Ask people on the coasts or the people facing increased rates of floods, wildfires, hurricanes, island dwellers with raising sea waters, fishermen with less and less to fish, the list goes on...

We can waste our time arguing about the details or focus all of our energies on the solutions. I do think it's worth hashing out the details so we can really know where we stand and realize how bad it is (or not if that's what the facts say)! Yet at a certain point, we just have to start acting.

I found this article, The suburbs are the spiritual home of overconsumption. But they also hold the key to a better future, a very worthwhile read proving that no matter where you live you can make key changes toward a more sustainable lifestyle.

After all, we are all just reaching toward sustainability. It's literally impossible in this day in age to be divorced from the system that is killing our earth. With that said, it is very possible to take the necessary steps toward living more lightly and aligned with the earth. If the movement toward a gentler way continues, we can truly make lasting change and turn this ship around.



Posted from my blog with SteemPress : http://www.ozarkmountainjewel.com/2019/03/06/unbelievable-stats-on-climate-change/
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An excellent post @mountainjewel, as it speaks straight from my heart. (True, it's your heart, but it resonates a lot with mine.) Although many of these findings are quite recent (the one about the insects I first read about two weeks ago, or so), it fits the pattern of horrible predictions we've been hearing since... well, since I was child, really. Because of this, it doesn't really matter how accurate the numbers are. If wildlife made up not 3 but 13% of all land animals, would it be any better? I hardly think so. Soon it will be less than 1%, but the situation will be the same. Now these processes are happening ever so slowly, giving us a chance to take the hummer around the block a couple more times, tossing a few more styrofoam cups out the window, at least for today, most likely tomorrow too, and probably even next week...

Interestingly, it was during my bike trip this fall that I confronted my mind with this situation, and that in spite of the steadily growing movement for change, the bulk of our species is still heading into the wrong direction, and quite rapidly so. In the town of our friend we saw many wonderful permaculture projects sprouting up everywhere... yet the wildfires were just on the far side of the mountain range, driving home the notion that what took years to grow could be gone within just a disastrous night.

It is not like me to give up hope... but the creeping notion that has made home in my heart is that we may have to accept our death. Not just on an individual level of passing, but on a collective one. One day we may be gone, all of us, our cultures, our science, our legacy, our memories. I highly doubt that the planet or life itself would disappear, at least not now, so I'm sure there will be other things there, but it won't be us. And it may even be pretty bleak for a while until whatever it is emerges. And in the grand scheme of things it won't matter if you were part of the problem or the solution, or whether you've done anything at all.

In this light, I tend to break away from wanting to be the steward of a piece of land, increasing the biodiversity, raising the water table, amplifying micro-climates, etc. in favor of ... of doing exactly what you mentioned in your last post: riding my bike everywhere. Just ride and ride, visiting all the wonderful and horrible places, seeing with my own eyes the destruction that's happening, how many people struggle with it, and how some of them try to turn things around, until... well, until I can't, or we can't no more.

Now I feel a bad for painting such a pessimistic outlook, as I know I used to hate it when someone came with this "it's too late, and there's nothing we can do" attitude. Nevertheless, this is exactly what my inner feeling has been for the last months.

wow, thank you so much for this beautiful piece which i wish many will read. it really touches my heart! hearts all over this post haha!

aside from thinking you overly bleak or pessimistic, this is the kind of dialogue i was hoping to engage with by writing some posts on climate change. i find SOOO often we want to go back to the "rainbows" side of thing and shine a light on what is positive instead of really digging in with what is and as you so beautiful articulated, to just be with it.

it reminds me a book i picked up once after a meditation retreat. you know, those lucky turn of the pages where you land somewhere and the words really touch you. i wish i knew what the book was. but it was about a man, a western man, who at some point after "making it" a bit in western culture felt so empty - it wasn't working for him- decided he would go over to india and just meditate meditate meditate- even to the point of locking himself in isolation for looong periods of time. well, eventually he came "back", he returned to western culture and all that meditation had indeed taught him something. before he stayed away because the pain he experienced observing the world was too great and he felt like he couldn't really do anything to help it, but when he made his final return and started living in society again he realized his role was to witness the world as it continued dying. that's what he said - it was his role to witness the world as it continued into destruction.

it still really touches me to this day and your words almost make me tear up,

Just ride and ride, visiting all the wonderful and horrible places, seeing with my own eyes the destruction that's happening, how many people struggle with it, and how some of them try to turn things around, until... well, until I can't, or we can't no more.

because... it's so true and sometimes, though i'm quite committed to this homesteading effort, sometimes i'm not sure it's the answer, or that there is an answer at all. or that "the good guys will win"- or whatever a mass scale shift effort looks like. i'm not sure that there is an answer, but rather that we just need to fill our time with actions that fulfill us and that we feel good about. spend our time here doing things which fill our soul. biking has always been one of mine as well :)

after many years of not really thinking about climate change or looking at the details, i've dug back in over the past few days -- and as you said, the numbers really aren't crucial and that's how i feel, too -- it baffles me that most humans are continuing on a heedless trajectory - in fact i just don't understand it and it's hard for me to witness. i'm not at the point where that author was to witness the world dying and breaking.. it pains me greatly and yet on the other side of that is the realization of all of us dying and our inability to control any outcome, really, that happens outside of ourselves.

i don't have any conclusion, but want to say again that i really appreciate and feel deeply what you wrote and i thank you.

What really disturb's me is the powers at be focus our attention to CO2. I feel these other pollutants have more of an impact on or daily lives.

One solution which you are doing is getting back to nature..grow and harvest your own food. Its a solution that takes care of our destructive forces. The more we turn over to others to provide for our needs the more harm is done to our ecosystems.

Mother earth will go on with or without us. We don't fully understand all the different cycles of the earth, moon and sun. Almost all of them, we truly have no control over and ignorantly think we do.

We must stop poisoning ourselves before nature does it for us. There are big events that we don't know what the outcome will be for humans like magnetic pole switching. But we do know that having an unpolluted ecosystem where we live in harmony with nature will be able to get us through.

yes, your words speak right to the heart of so many of the issues we are facing. thanks for your thoughtful and heartfelt reply. i lift it up and hear you!

as so many of the issues are related to our impact on the earth, it makes sense to really hone in and focus on ways that we can shift the problem spots. agriculture is one of the single greatest issues causing all of these ripples. certainly in many cases we humans don't know what the results of our actions will be over time, but currently we're starting to get the message louder and louder and it's beyond time to really start to pay attention and accordingly change our actions.

so many of us are starting to understand the problems, now it's time to live out the solutions! <3

Yet at a certain point, we just have to start acting.

🖤💛🖤💛🖤

My new favorite thing to tell people: go bury some sticks.

yessss, get your hands dirrrrty and put some seeds in the ground!!! :)

This weekend is nettle planting and chicken compost harvest :)

Loving this sunshine!!! Started off at 20° this morning and we're going up up up to 70+ on Friday! And the plum trees are budding like crazy!

3% of all earth’s land animals are wild anymore. The remaining 97% are humans and their livestock & pets.

This one is the most alarming to me. I assumed you are referring to animal population number in proportional percents. It is actually referring to size of mass if you put all animals together. Humans are bigger than most animals.

The your point is made loud and clear. People can't occupy so much of the world without expecting the remaining organisms, including ourselves, to fall into decline.

One part of a solution that I think rarely gets talked about is family values. Although it has no direct connection to the environment, it determines how sexually promiscuous our offspring will be, and shapes their worldview.

yes we are certainly taking up so much space! and it will lead to depleted resources the world round. we can't keep up this amount of consumption of the earth's resources and continue (over)populating the planet. many times i wonder if the way the earth is responding to us is just her way of shaking us off a bit, like flees off a dog's back... we are way out of scale and nature has a way of "checking and balancing" everything. it's course to think of it that way, but all predator/prey/ecosystem relationships must answer to this law of nature. we certainly aren't above it. family values and ways we raise our children to also align themselves with earth care is also very important, along with population control, which you mentioned.

Had to find a silly dinosaur extinction meme to highlight your comment.

images (1).jpg

grow your own food, hunt wild meat






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The problem with the discussions on climate change is that they are way too emotional and move very quickly far from the facts (and numbers). The numbers are however not the most alarming point to me. They are catastrophic, this is true, but the reaction is even worse. It is like going straight towards a ravine and instead of slowing down, humans are accelerating the pace. I guess nature will find a solution soon, at that rhythm...

Here we do what we can at our scale: eating local, reducing waste, downscaling the electricity consumption (without going back to the caves), etc... Even if more and more people are feeling concerned (from discussions with neighbours and friend), I have the feeling we are still a minority.

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I feel I resonate very much with what @stortebeker commented. We start our journeys with so much optimism and feel like we're finally doing something to head in the right direction, then start to realise that we're little more than stray ants as the masses keep sweeping along in their tidal wave. Even my own family do the bare minimum when it comes to ethical consumerism and I find myself with the extra workload of trying to recycle waste they bring in which needn't have been brought in, in the first place.

People don't like to be told to minimise. They enjoy the luxury of laziness that consumerism brings. Why should they do it when no-one else is?

I noticed your reference to 'fleas being shaken off a dog's back' in one of your replies (George Carlin?). It could have been Carlin who also said that people trying to save the earth aren't trying to save it, they're trying make it a nicer place for themselves. We won't kill the earth, but we could very well make it so inhospitable for ourselves that we go extinct. Then nature can repair itself.

I'm never quite sure what people class as 'climate change deniers'. It seems to be those who don't believe mankind had caused the change. Some deniers, like Joel Salatin, are very much on the same path as those who believe in manmade climate change, so I have to wonder if beliefs matter when we're walking the same path. People talk about reversing climate change, but I think the earth is way bigger than that and even if we could reforest and remove pollution to where it used to be, it's not going to suddenly change. It would take generations for things to settle back into equilibrium and the earth's climate will still continue on it's merry way in its own cycles anyway.

Incidentally, I was watching David Attenborough today and he was talking about camels. Of the dromedaries which exist today, they are all decended from domesticated ones and there are very few wild bactrian ones too. It certainly adds credence to those wild animal statistics.

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