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And There Goes The Polar Bear As Well..

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  Quote Dolphin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: And There Goes The Polar Bear As Well..
    Posted: 13-Sep-2007 at 07:10
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6986980.stm
 
 
US predicts polar bear meltdown

Polar%20bear.%20Image:%20AP
Polar bears use ice as a base for hunting and feeding
Two-thirds of the world's polar bears will be gone by the middle of the century, says a US government agency.

The US Geological Survey (USGS) says parts of the Arctic are losing summer ice so fast that no bears will be able to live there within several decades.

Scientists believe Arctic ice will hit a record low this year.

The US government commissioned the study to assess whether polar bears should be protected under the national Endangered Species Act.

The grim news about polar bears and sea ice decline is a call to action, not despair
Kassie Siegel
Its decision is due in January 2008. The species (Ursus maritimus) is classified as Vulnerable to extinction on the internationally acknowledged Red List of Threatened Species.

Rapid response

The USGS surveyed evidence on the decline of Arctic summer ice, which has accelerated in the last decade, and the projections of climate models.

Based on this, they concluded that some areas where polar bears now roam, such as the Barents Sea north of Norway and Russia, would be unable to support the animals at all by the middle of the century.

The bears might persist in other regions; but about 40% of the summer habitat will be gone by 2050, and with it, two-thirds of the current population, the USGS concludes.

Sea%20ice,%20Greenland%20%28Image:%20BBC%29

Last month, scientists at the US National Snow and Ice Data Center said Arctic summer ice was almost 30% below the long-term average, and predicted 2007 would show the lowest ice cover on record.

Polar bears use ice as a hunting base.

"The grim news about polar bears and sea ice decline is horrifying, but it is a call to action, not despair," said Kassie Siegel of the Center for Biological Diversity.

"Our hope lies in a rapid response, including both deep and immediate carbon dioxide reductions and a full-court press on other greenhouse pollutants."

The Center has petitioned the US to list the polar bear as an endangered species, which would oblige the government to protect it. Campaigners believe this would mean curbing greenhouse gas emissions.

As the USGS report came out, the US administration was negotiating the "Sydney Declaration", a document on climate change, at the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation forum in Australia.

The deal aims to reduce the rate of growth of greenhouse gas emissions on a voluntary basis.

 
 
 
Do you think there is a realistic chance that if all the species that are endangered die out and the trend continues into the futute, that eventually the biodiversity of the planet will become so limited that natural evolution will be disturbed, and we could actually revert the planet back to a time where only tiny organisms existed? (If you know what I mean..)
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Justinian View Drop Down
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  Quote Justinian Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15-Sep-2007 at 01:37
Absolutely appalling.Dead  This is alluded to on the planet earth series.  I think the potential to send us back that far is there.  But I don't think we'll push it back to single cell organisms, just kill off a ton of species, mess up the ecosystem, screw up the climate, pretty much mess up the natural balance of things.  But not to that degree.

Edited by Justinian - 15-Sep-2007 at 01:41
"War is a cowardly escape from the problems of peace."--Thomas Mann

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  Quote elenos Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17-Sep-2007 at 07:58
Another scenario is animals could mutate and become smarter to overcome our advantage over them. In our recent rush to develop we haven't given nature enough time to respond. The way it is the free animals are becoming more feral and could become more dangerous. The polar bear is dangerous but only within their own environment. A species could evolve that can live in other kinds of wasteland. I suppose we could blow them away but that approach has to stop somewhere.
 
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