Many of you will have heard of the Golden Toad, the Passenger Pigeon, the Tasmanian Tiger, the Great Auk, the Quagga, and the Stephens Island Wren.
All of these animals are extinct, all within the last 250 years, and all (except perhaps the Golden Toad) almost entirely due to the actions of humans.
These species were all lost in distant parts of the world or, in the case of the European Great Auk, generations ago. These names, although familiar to us, seem to resonate with times and places other than our own.
Perhaps this is why so many seem immune to the pleas of conservationists citing examples such as these as evidence for our continued detrimental effect upon the environment. Extinction seems to be a remote phenomenon not directly affected by the actions of modern Brits.
Maybe this would be different if we had recently lost a species of our own, if we had an example of an endemic British species recently lost due to the actions of modern Brits.
Well as a matter of fact we do.
I was shocked to read in this months BBC wildlife magazine of the Ivell's Sea Anemone - a species endemic to Britain that became extinct as recently as 1983. Even as someone who has completed a degree in Biology, with modules on British marine ecology, the name was completely unfamiliar to me.
It is obviously a terrible shame, perhaps even criminal, that the Ivell's Sea Anemone is gone for good, but why are conservationists not using the name to their advantage? What are they not shouting on rooftops that the Scottish Wild Cat, the Red Squirrel, and the Smooth Snake are in danger of going the same was as the Ivell's Sea Anemone? Why is every British school child not taught to say its name and lament its loss?
In a time when the general opinion is that the environment can wait in the face of larger challenges such as economic recovery, perhaps the Ivell's Sea Anemone should be used to remind us Brits that the environment is as much our responsibility as that of the rainforest-felling third world dictatorships we so love to condemn and patronize.
Showing posts with label Ivell's Sea Anemone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ivell's Sea Anemone. Show all posts
Tuesday, 20 April 2010
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