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Ancient Species Show Their Resilience, Highlight Need For Conservation (PHOTOS)

First Posted: 11/12/11 01:45 PM ET Updated: 11/12/11 01:49 PM ET

From Dr. Piotr Naskrecki:

What would you rather save from extinction: 3 different species of parrots, or a hummingbird, an owl, and a parrot? With an increasing frequency, such heartbreaking choices are becoming the reality of nature conservation. Given their limited resources, and the even more limited attention span of politicians and governments, conservation biologists face the need to select targets of their conservation campaigns very carefully. Traditionally, conservation actions have focused on areas that sheltered the highest numbers of species. But now biologists are shifting their priorities away from simple species richness towards what is known as the phyletic diversity, or deep genetic divides among organisms. Rather than trying to protect every single species on Earth, they try to save representatives of as many distinct and diverse evolutionary lines as possible. And the easiest way to find phyletic diversity is to look at the survivors of the oldest lineages of life.

What drove horseshoe crabs, relics of a lineage that blossomed in the Carboniferous, to leave the ocean every spring and lay trillions of eggs on the sandy beaches of Delaware Bay? Why are cycads, plants that thrived in the Mesozoic, full of toxins so powerful that they will alter your DNA if ingested? What did the first proto-crickets sound like? We are incredibly lucky to be able to try to answer these questions by studying the last living members of these ancient lineages. Some of them are still around because of their unparalleled resilience and adaptability, having weathered countless changes to Earth's climate and topography. Others have managed to outlive their then contemporaries by exploring niches created by newly evolved, more advanced groups of organisms. Still others owe their survival to sheer luck of complete isolation from the rest of the world, following a breakup of ancient continental landmasses.

But individual species and lineages are not the only relics that still grace the surface of our ancient planet. Entire habitats and ecosystems are sometimes survivors of long-gone conditions, and frequently they shelter unique assemblages of species that can be found nowhere else. They are sanctuaries of biodiversity and, increasingly, sanctuaries of life as it appeared before our kind left the African savannas and spilled over the globe, altering and wiping out countless biological communities and species. Like the organismal relics, these sanctuaries of life must be the first to be considered for preservation and protection from development. [Text continues after images.]

All images and captions courtesy of Dr. Piotr Naskrecki.


About Piotr:

Piotr Naskrecki is an entomologist and conservation biologist, currently at the Museum of Comparative Zoology of Harvard University, where he works on conservation, biogeography, and evolution of sound-producing insects.

Piotr has a new book, "Relics: Travels in Nature's Time Machine", the result of several years of globetrotting and many nasty tropical diseases, Piotr puts a spotlight on some of the most remarkable, but often little known and under-appreciated survivors from the long gone eras. These animals and plants are sometimes the last living relatives of groups that dominated our planet's ecosystems millions of years ago, giving us a glimpse of what life might have been like in those strange days known as the Paleozoic and Mesozoic.

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From Dr. Piotr Naskrecki: What would you rather save from extinction: 3 different species of parrots, or a hummingbird, an owl, and a parrot? With an increasing frequency, such heartbreaking choice...
From Dr. Piotr Naskrecki: What would you rather save from extinction: 3 different species of parrots, or a hummingbird, an owl, and a parrot? With an increasing frequency, such heartbreaking choice...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Italianbrian
I quote movies and speak Shatner.
11:21 PM on 11/14/2011
What a sin.Humans are GREAT at destroying, but NEVER fast on the recovery.We are so arrogant to believe that we are the "Superior" species.....WE WILL PAY THE COST SOMEDAY.....
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05:36 PM on 11/14/2011
much of the destruction is caused by poor resource uses. we are entering the biotechnology revolution which will be bigger than the industrial revolution and conputer revolution. its moving faster than moore's law. letting eco systems get decimated due to incompetence will haunt generations to come.

the anthropecine era is being heralded by one fo the biggest extinction events in earths history. this is one reason we need a real worldwide gov. without some sort of central organization, humans may be on that list.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
06:22 PM on 11/13/2011
We shouldn't have to make such heartbreaking choices. We should be able to save them all. We are, after all, responsible for their endangerment in the first place.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joshy X
observer in Weimar Amerika
12:25 PM on 11/13/2011
isn't it interesting that the countries that have the most species extinction are all run by left-wing governments?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stanschurman
01:48 PM on 11/13/2011
And the connection is?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joshy X
observer in Weimar Amerika
01:54 PM on 11/13/2011
who in the world ruins the environment more than left wing govts?...
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sillyfrog
Pastafarian and UU student
02:09 PM on 11/13/2011
Being a dittohead is such a stupid way to live.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joshy X
observer in Weimar Amerika
06:59 PM on 11/13/2011
oh sparky did your prof tell ya that?
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mmsuki
Fine; I evolved, you didn't.
12:19 PM on 11/13/2011
The best way to save any species is to set aside their habitat so they can live in peace.
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jgw845
Common Sense Isn't!
03:39 PM on 11/13/2011
I'm sure you meant to imply it when you said "set aside," but as we see all over the world, creating reserves in not enough. There must also me resources allocated and applied to ensure that those reserves are protected and respected as natural habitats set aside and not sight seeing venues or hunting/poaching grounds.

The Java Rhino, a protected animal in Vietnam, is now extinct because of poaching.
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spydrworks1067
09:03 PM on 11/14/2011
And the western black and northern white rhinos in Africa are also extinct.
12:17 PM on 11/13/2011
Isn't the world suppose to end in 2012 anyway? If the whole world is distroyed, we will all die and we'll have nothing to worry about.......... I hope we, as a whole, can make changes for the better to conserve our planet. However, it takes all of us, not just a few, to do it. But every bit counts and we can all do our part, even if all we do is turn off all our lights, recycling our bottles and cans, and unplugging unused electronics.
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sillyfrog
Pastafarian and UU student
10:37 AM on 11/14/2011
It maybe we all die next year but how do you want to die, as a true warrior and/or warrioress or as a coward with blindfolds?
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
12:11 PM on 11/13/2011
The most resilient and most ancient life forms are the microbes. They are now the most populous species on Earth. Every human has 10 microbe cells for each human cell. Humans are in a symbiotic relationship with microbe symbionts. They help shape our brains and our genetics.

http://blogdredd.blogspot.com/2011/11/weekend-rebel-science-excursion-10.html
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jgw845
Common Sense Isn't!
03:31 PM on 11/13/2011
Microbes are not a "species." There are thousands of forms of microbial life that occur in all three kingdoms of life. Many microbial life forms form symbiotic or parasitic relationships with other life forms, including humans. Genetic changes occur because of mutation or natural selection. The gene causing Sickle Cell Anemia is an example of natural selection that caused the evolution of humans resistant to African Sleeping Sickness carried by the Tse Tse Fly. The organism which causes A.S.S. only indirectly contributed to the genetic change. Direct microbial interaction with a living brain most often results in the death of the infected organism.
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
04:44 PM on 11/13/2011
Thanks for wiki on microbes. They were around billions of years before humans were. You will learn to let them decide who are species and who are not, because they will be here longer than anything else you would like to call species.

I cite to the latest microbiological science on this subject in the links provided.

This is not what mama and papa taught you.
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Dredd
Our government is a wartocracy.
11:53 AM on 11/14/2011
jgw845,

You seem to have a degree in psychology too. Great. But it is a bit dated. Update it at the community college near you. And your microbiology is also old school. You should read up on the new discoveries just published recently.

http://powertoxins.blogspot.com/2011/10/hypothesis-microbes-generate-toxins-of.html
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JTWallace
11:42 AM on 11/13/2011
We have aided and abetted the housing industry who has destroyed animals native to the land they occupied in deserts, suburbs, and parks. Additionally, factories and the drug industry has polluted our streams who suffered no consequences as contributors to politicos turned a blind eye or washed over the ''incident''. Yet we dare to protest the oil drilling business which has placed us hostage to the mid east who can charge us anything they wish and would underwrite terrorists against us. We are so dependent on oil why, why haven't we done something about an alternative in this country when we had all the means to develop solar, wind, or any other alternative. We became a nation of waste, credit cards, billions to other countries, and we forgot about our future as we gave more influence to Unions, who drove our jobs overseas and created teachers who no longer care about education though I'm sure some still do but the overall situation is reflected in our fall down the ladder from which we once held top place. We seem to have lost sight of who we were in this country as a nation of laws with our Constitution which is being degraded each decade as party affiliation takes a hammer to it. We are discouraged to fly the Stars and Stripes or say the Pledge of Aligence because it may insult immigrants who come here for the very thing we were.
12:31 PM on 11/13/2011
It's not impossible. One of my cousins built his car and got it to run on used veggie oil from a deepfryer. If a high school kid can do it, why can't the big, rich car companies with genius car designers do it? I know we are making better and more eco-friendly cars and many companies are going "green", but it can't be impossible to break our obession with oil.
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jgw845
Common Sense Isn't!
03:43 PM on 11/13/2011
The obsession is with money, not with oil. Right now there is far more money in oil than in bio-deisel. When the money dynamic changes from oil to another energy source, the money will follow immediately.
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wa0cal
wa0cal
11:26 AM on 11/13/2011
We are gradually losing our rain forests and when do we not only will we lose many species of animals but some very valuable vegetation. We can't afford losing either
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joshy X
observer in Weimar Amerika
12:25 PM on 11/13/2011
brazil is run by left-wingers...you can talk to them
12:37 PM on 11/13/2011
Your right. Hopefully we can get something done to save it before it is gone and hopefully let the damaged land return to the way it used to be. We can all make small changes to help out our world: from recycling cans/bottles to just turning off lights when we don't need them or even not driving for just one day out of the week. Although I'm not helping too much by sitting on the computer typing this....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Frank
My last name is FRANK so thats what I am..
10:00 AM on 11/13/2011
there's a saying and it goes like this: humans are the stupidest animals on the planet
12:45 PM on 11/13/2011
Have you ever read Mark Twain's "The Lowest Animal"? If not, I think you and many others would find it to be an interesting and eye-opening read. Just google it and it should pop-up.
09:59 AM on 11/13/2011
Not to bash on this, I enjoy a good discussion about conservation priotirties... however, these organisms are not (!!!!!!!!!!!!) the organisms that lived 100's of millions of years ago. Perhaps they appear to look like the fossils that we've recovered but that simply implies that they've changed their outward appearances quite little, which is rare certainly but by no means implies that these are actually the organisms that lived in prehistoric times. Odds are that by studying their behavior, reproduction, and especially things like gene expression, metabolics, and genomics we will uncover very little about that organism in the past. Perhaps it diverged from other reptile 10's of millions of years ago, by studying this organism we can only say it shared a common ancestor with other reptiles at a very deep timescale, NOT(!!!) that this organism is still that common ancestor. It's easy for us all to forget that this organism has been undergoing millions of years of selection/drift and may give us some signal as to what the common ancestor could have been like, we can infer that sort of thing for any two organisms, one does not need to be a "living fossil". I'm not saying we should abandon this all together, typically organisms like this have very few close relatives, which makes them of interest for preservation of phyletic conservation, they are not, species rich, they are also typically not expected to be species rich anytime in the future which we should also remember
11:55 AM on 11/13/2011
It does help to read a book before voicing an impassioned critique of its content. Some of the main points of this book are that (1) "living fossils" do not exist, (2) none of the currently living "relics" is a miracle survivor and ancestor of currently living species, (3) all currently living species are the result of current selective forces and we must exercise great caution about inferring anything about past conditions based on their superficial appearance, but (4) lineages that exhibit a strong degree of bradytely or are the last survivors of a clade are often carriers of genes that have otherwise disappeared from the global genetic pool, and thus are good candidates for phyletic diversity conservation.
10:51 AM on 11/14/2011
Those are great points but the critique I was making was on the misleading article that did not include any of those points you had to make retroactively. If the article would have included those points (if they were so paramount to the concept as you argue I would have hoped they would have) I would not have made my argument, instead it failed to make those points which I believed made the article misleading, so I commented. I do believe this discrepancy may be more a product of reporters attempts to reduce complicated science to media packaged soundbytes than of directed attempts to conceal potential criticisms
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
09:54 AM on 11/13/2011
these species must be preserved. every one lost, sends our planet off its curve:(
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jgw845
Common Sense Isn't!
03:51 PM on 11/13/2011
It is estimated 95% of all species that ever existed are now extinct. H. sapiens is a relative new comer and the changes that modern civilization has wrought is less than the blink of an eye.

I'll agree that our civilization has and is negatively impacting the environment, but let's not over react on the "Butterfly Effect." Species will evolve and go extinct with and without our impact. Eventually, H. sapiens will go extinct too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
08:10 PM on 11/13/2011
i have no quarrel with the ways of mother nature. i do however, have a big problem when homo sapiens is the cause of species deletion
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gypsy508
09:16 AM on 11/13/2011
The pharmaceutical industry is pretty much single handedly destroying the horseshoe crab.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
coreten
09:03 AM on 11/13/2011
Hopefully some will still be here after we are gone.
08:33 AM on 11/13/2011
orthoptera rule!
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jgw845
Common Sense Isn't!
03:53 PM on 11/13/2011
.. and they're tasty when quickly fried!