Humans on Verge of Causing 6th Great Mass Extinction?

December 24th, 2011 | By

Dodo specimen
Will 75 percent of Earth’s species go the way of the dodo?
CREDIT: Dreamstime

Are humans causing a mass extinction on the magnitude of the one that killed the dinosaurs?

The answer is yes, according to a new analysis — but we still have some time to stop it.

Mass extinctions include events in which 75 percent of the species on Earth disappear within a geologically short time period, usually on the order of a few hundred thousand to a couple million years. It’s happened only five times before in the past 540 million years of multicellular life on Earth. (The last great extinction occurred 65 million years ago, when the dinosaurs were wiped out.) At current rates of extinction, the study found, Earth will enter its sixth mass extinction within the next 300 to 2,000 years.

“It’s bittersweet, because we’re showing that we have this crisis,” study co-author Elizabeth Ferrer, a graduate student in biology at the University of California, Berkeley, told LiveScience. “But we still have time to fix this.”

Others aren’t so optimistic that humans will actually do anything to stop the looming disaster, saying that politics is successfully working against saving species and the planet.

The 6th extinction

Species go extinct all the time, said Anthony Barnosky, the curator of the Museum of Paleontology at UC Berkeley and another co-author of the paper, which appears in today’s (March 2) issue of the journal Nature. But new species also evolve constantly, meaning that biodiversity usually stays constant. Mass extinctions happen when that balance goes out of whack. Suddenly, extinctions far outpace the genesis of new species, and the old rules for species survival go out the window. [Read: Mass Extinction Threat: Earth on Verge of Huge Reset Button?]

“If the fossil record tells us one thing, it’s that when we kick over into a mass extinction regime, results are extreme, they’re irreversible and they’re unpredictable,” David Jablonski, a paleontologist at the University of Chicago who was not involved in the study, told LiveScience. “Factors that promote success and survival during normal times seem to melt away.”

Everyone knows that we now lose many species a year, Barnosky said. “The question is, ‘Is the pace of extinction we’re seeing today over these short time intervals usual or unusual?’”

Answering the question requires stitching together two types of data: that from the fossil record and that collected by conservation biologists in the modern era. They don’t always match up well. For example, Barnosky said, fossils tell us lots about the history of clams, snails and other invertebrates. But in the modern world, biologists have only assessed the extinction risk for 3 percent of known species of such invertebrates. That makes comparisons tough.

The fossil record also presents a blurrier history than today’s yearly records of species counts. Sparse examples of a species may be distributed across millions of years of fossil history, the researchers wrote, while modern surveys provide dense samples over short periods of time. And even the best source of modern data — the International Union for the Conservation of Nature Red List of threatened and endangered species — has catalogued the conservation status of less than 2.7 percent of the 1.9 million named species out there.

Coming crisis

The researchers worked to combine these two sources of data, Ferrer said, taking a conservative approach to filling in gaps and estimating future directions. They found that the overall rate of extinction is, in fact, between three to 80 times higher than non-mass extinction rates. Most likely, species are going extinct three to 12 times faster than would be expected if there were no crisis, Ferrer said.

That gives Earth between three and 22 centuries to reach the point of mass extinction if nothing is done to stop the problem. (The wide range is a factor of the uncertainty in the data and different rates of extinction found in various species.) The good news, Barnosky said, is that the total loss so far is not devastating. In the last 200 years, the researchers found, only 1 to 2 percent of all species have gone extinct.

The strongest evidence for comparison between modern and ancient times comes from vertebrate animals, Barnosky said, which means there is still work to do collecting better data for more robust comparisons with better invertebrate data. But, he said, the research “shows absolutely without a doubt that we do have this major problem.”

Back from the brink?

The culprits for the biodiversity loss include climate change, habitat loss, pollution and overfishing, the researchers wrote.

“Most of the mechanisms that are occurring today, most of them are caused by us,” Ferrer said.

So can we fix it? Yes, there’s time to cut dependence on fossil fuels, alleviate climate change and commit to conservation of habitat, the study scientists say. The more pressing question is, will we?

Barnosky and Ferrer both say they’re optimistic that people will pull together to solve the problem once they understand the magnitude of the looming disaster. Jablonski puts himself into the “guardedly optimistic category.”

“I think a lot of the problems probably have a lot more to do with politics than with science,” Jablonski said.

That’s where Paul Ehrlich, the president of the Center for Conservation Biology at Stanford University and author of “The Population Bomb” (Sierra Club-Ballantine, 1968), sees little hope.

“Everything we’re doing in Washington [D.C.] today is working in the wrong direction,” Ehrlich, who was not involved in the research, told LiveScience. “There isn’t a single powerful person in the world who is really talking about what the situation is … It’s hard to be cheery when you don’t see the slightest sign of any real attention being paid.”

Other researchers take an upbeat view.

“If we have a business-as-usual scenario, it is pretty grim, but it isn’t yet written,” Stuart Pimm, a professor of conservation ecology at Duke University who was not involved in the research, told LiveScience in a phone interview from Chile, where he was doing fieldwork.

In 2010, Pimm said, the United Nations declared the International Year of Biodiversity. According to a UN statement, the 193 countries involved agreed to protect 17 percent of Earth’s terrestrial ecosystems and 10 percent of marine and coastal areas. Some types of ecosystems still lag behind, Pimm said, but there is reason for hope.

“I hope that this will alert people to the fact that we are living in geologically unprecedented times,” Pimm said. “Only five times in Earth’s history has life been as threatened as it is now.”

You can follow LiveScience Senior Writer Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas.

 

Humans on Verge of Causing 6th Great Mass Extinction | Environment & Climate Change | Endangered Species | LiveScience.

Cory Gunz – Loco (Feat Ryan Leslie) [CDQ]

December 23rd, 2011 | By

Cory Gunz Loco Feat Ryan Leslie CDQ

I posted the clean version of Cory Gunz‘ new single “Loco” featuring Ryan Leslie yesterday, now here is the full dirty version with a new verse from Ryan! You can listen to the Ryan Leslie-produced single below:

Cory Gunz – Loco (Feat Ryan Leslie) [CDQ] is a post from: Young Money HQ

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Video: Drake Threatens Tattoo Artist Who Tattooed His Name On Woman’s Forehead!

December 23rd, 2011 | By

In the video above, Drake talks to Mando Fresko about the women who got “DRAKE” tattooed on her forehead (you can see a pic in the video). Drizzy says he wants to speak to the lady who got the tattoo done and understand why she did it, but he also calls the tattoo artist an asshole and says he would fuck him up if he ever came across him.

“The guy who tatted it is a fucking asshole, for real. I don’t fuck with that guy. Fuck you to that tat artist cause you’re an asshole for real, and you should lose your job. You should never do tattoos again. I don’t fuck with you and if I ever see you, I’mma fuck you up.”

Video: Drake Threatens Tattoo Artist Who Tattooed His Name On Woman’s Forehead! is a post from: Young Money HQ

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Tyga Says His Chris Brown Collabo On Careless World Could Be Bigger Than “Deuces”

December 22nd, 2011 | By

I posted part 1 of Tyga‘s interview with Vlad TV just over a week ago, now here is part 2. In the interview, T-Raw speaks on working with Young Money label-mates Nicki Minaj and Drake, how he hooked up with Chris Brown, if him and Chris plan on doing a sequel to their Fan Of A Fan mixtape, an overseas leg of the “F.A.M.E.” tour, and more. Tygaman also says he has a record on his forthcoming Careless World album with Chris Brown that he thinks could be bigger than “Deuces“. Hit the jump to view some footage of Tyga‘s meet and greet session at F As In Frank’s clothing store in Toronto, Canada on December 2nd.

Tyga Says His Chris Brown Collabo On Careless World Could Be Bigger Than “Deuces” is a post from: Young Money HQ Related posts:
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PJ Morton Signs To Young Money Entertainment!

December 21st, 2011 | By

PJ Morton Signs To Young Money Entertainment

Young Money have added another artist to their roster, this time it’s New Orleans’ own PJ Morton! He is the son of Bishop Paul S. Morton and a member of the band Maroon 5. I don’t really know anything about this guy but I read that he is a songwriter, singer and producer. The announcement that PJ Morton signed to YMCMB came from his Twitter page, which Mack Maine also retweeted, and his band Maroon 5 congratulated him on their Twitter page too.

PJ Morton Signs To Young Money Entertainment

After the jump, you can check out PJ‘s version of Lil Wayne’s “How To Love” single.

So Young Moneyians, what are you’re thoughts on Young Mula‘s latest signing :?:

PJ Morton Signs To Young Money Entertainment! is a post from: Young Money HQ

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