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Kieran Suckling

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7 Billion: More of Us, Fewer of Them

Posted: 11/01/11 02:41 PM ET

Remember this from your sex ed class?

"Wear a condom and save an endangered species. This little piece of latex may be your best chance at ever seeing a polar bear in the wild."

Me neither. But what if?

The result might be fewer people on this planet -- and fighting chance for polar bears, Florida panthers and scores of other plants and animals being driven to extinction by human overpopulation.

On Monday, the world population hit the 7 billion milestone -- and we're still adding more than 200,000 people to the planet every day.

While sex ed classes are still showing excruciatingly boring videos, apparently trying to use ennui as a prophylactic, the Center for Biological Diversity launched a new campaign, 7 Billion and Counting.

We're giving away 100,000 Endangered Species Condoms, packaged in colorful images of imperiled species to get the conversation and titters started about how overpopulation is driving the planet's six largest mass extinction crisis.

"Hump smarter, save the snail darter." "Cover your tweedle, save the American burying beetle." Who knew talking about extinction could be such fun?

The condoms are a huge hit: more than 1,000 volunteers are distributing them in all 50 states, handing them out and talking about overpopulation. They're being passed around at concerts, health centers, colleges, libraries, bars and even a research station in Antarctica.

The conversation is deadly important.

Species around the globe are being driven toward extinction at more than 100 times the natural rate as the human footprint expands. Our growing numbers gobble up pristine wildlife habitat, suck waters dry, pollute the air, poison with pesticides and alter the climate in a way that makes life -- especially for plants and animals already on the brink -- more difficult than ever.

That includes species here in the U.S.

The Florida panther once ranged throughout the southeastern U.S. but now survives in just 5 percent of his former range. Its habitat has disappeared with the rise of urban sprawl and fragmented landscapes and now just 100 to 120 panthers are left.

The Atlantic bluefin tuna is being overfished to feeding growing populations. The western Atlantic bluefin that spawns in the Gulf of Mexico has declined by more than 80 percent since 1970.

In California, the San Joaquin kit fox -- relatively common until the 1930s -- has declined as its Central Valley habitat has been lost in conversion to agriculture. The four counties where this endangered fox lives today have added 1.5 million people in the last three decades.

The overpopulation crisis only stands to worsen if we don't act.

Demographic projections have us exceeding 9 billion by 2050. Simultaneously, we are witnessing one of the most rapid plant and animal extinction waves ever known on the planet.

The connection between population growth and species extinction is unavoidable. Intensified by consumption levels in the developed world, particularly the buffet-style abundance of American consumption, it's also the number of people that makes the problem so much worse.

While the population growth rate has slowed in many countries, virtually all are still growing, still eating up more land and water, still polluting the air, and still driving species to extinction.

The United States is among those countries growing too fast despite a decrease in its rate of growth. It has one of the highest fertility rates in the developed world. And its per capita consumption is off the charts.

The familiar solutions for preserving the diversity of life on our planet -- reducing our carbon emission, ending fossil fuel dependency and preserving our remaining wildlands -- must remain in our priorities. However, recognizing that population growth jeopardizes all this work and the basic right of species survival (humans alike) is also critical. Every essential human need depends on the diversity that exists in the natural world.

The costs of doing nothing about overpopulation are steep and profound. Indeed, they are unacceptable. Left unchecked, the human species is lining up to wipe thousands of other species out of existence. If that happens, this planet will indeed be a very lonely place, left only with the remnants of the wild world this place once was.

 
 
 
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03:23 PM on 11/25/2011
Kieran, most sources put the current extinction rate at 1,000 times the "normal" background rate.
04:08 PM on 11/02/2011
Talk about the gorilla in the room: The population bomb and the failure of all of us to discuss it and find a solution to "endless" population growth will be seen as our greatest failing. Our children will curse us for not curbing it and the planet will not support it. Every attempt to discuss it is rebuffed behind some religious, divine "be fruitful and multiply" horse shit. I hope that I am wrong. I hope that we are as clever as some of us think we are. I even hope that the mythical magic sky people will come down and save us even though we don't deserve it....but, why would they save us if we don't have sense enough to save ourselves?
06:33 PM on 11/02/2011
Sadder still is the fact that those of us too stupid to realize this are the ones producing the most offspring...
02:54 PM on 11/25/2011
Sadder than that is that the ones who are aware enough to understand this are also producing offspring. davej1s laments "our children will curse us", but the obvious solution to that that problem is to not have any.
10:32 AM on 11/02/2011
The evolution (word chosen carefully) of population related discourse and initiatives has survived perpetual criticism due to incontrovertible connection to the meta-system known as planet Earth. It is with confidence that we await the maturity of now younger generations educated to be system's thinkers and bent on manifesting justice wherever they work. Justice for this next generation will consist of rendering "justice to women" in need of contraceptive technology, "justice to ecosystems" and other species in need of prolific and untrammeled habitat, and a "vastly improved economic and social justice". As system's thinkers they will find no contradictions in taking action to stabilize population, improving human welfare and confronting and defeating the tragic wastefulness promoted by mindless growth economies/ideologies.
http://www.populationspeakout.org/
08:06 AM on 11/02/2011
Interesting that the world apparently needs more polar bears and less intelligent, productive human beings who can create more useful technologies and innovations that will accommodate a growing population, while also developing ways to preserve our ecosystems. And a growing population is a sign of developmental progress, not merely an environmental crisis. Polar bears/animals might be crucial to our ecosystems but they cannot improve sanitation infrastructure, healthcare, discover breakthroughs in science, or make contributions to our general standards of living. While there are indeed still problems of starvation and lower standards of living for many on the planet, population pessimists only seem to view humanity as consumers and not producers. There are many reasons to celebrate 7 billion on the planet. It proves how ingenious we are, that we're better at keeping people alive more now than ever before, and we have more brains to solve more problems. That is absolutely the way we should see it--humanity is a solution, not the problem. I came across a brilliant spoof recently that parodies the notion that 7 billion polar bears are preferable to 7 billion people--it is hilarious and brilliant! http://www.worldbytes.org/get-off-my-planet-happy-birthday-7-billion/
01:07 PM on 11/02/2011
Humans are consumers. The only thing we produce for the ecosystem is pollution. Our growing population is having a devastating impact on the ecosystem and will eventually come back to bite us no matter which way you try to put a spin on it. This planet can only reasonably sustain a population of about 2 billion (and thats at an average standard of living, 2 billion at America's standard of living would be unsustainable long term)
02:17 PM on 11/02/2011
Thanks for the spoof, it is brilliant!!! 'cull the thickies' and 'get rid of all the useless people in useless countries' HAHAHAHAHA parodies modern day Malthusian thinking (incl. the above article) brilliantly.
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06:08 PM on 11/01/2011
What cutesy rhyme will save the threatened desert tortoise from Bright Source at Ivanpah? "Chevron can afford us, so we sold out the tortoise?" "Conservation bored us so we bulldozed the tortoise?" Oops, I forgot, we don't save tortoises around here...
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In wildness is the salvation of mankind
02:26 PM on 11/01/2011
When we discuss species, we are discussing the health and salvation of the Earth's ecosystems. These species, or biological diversity, are the creators and saviors of the Earth's natural, wild ecosystems, in the eco-nomics of all life, including man's existence.

One green above all other so-called greens and all issues, is the salvation and protection of both plant and animal biological diversity. Any agent that kills biological diversity, kills ecosystems, and killing ecosystems, kills that much of the planet.

The issue of saving biological diversity does not pit man against the plants and animals that share his world, but saving biological diversity, saves ecosystems, and saving ecosystems saves man's very existence.