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Archive for October, 2005

Gaining Ground

gaining-ground.jpgReaders of this blog will be interested in the forthcoming book by David Lavigne, PhD. Dave is a marine scientist, a renowned expert on seals, and science advisor to the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW). He is also an ethics advisor at Practical Ethics, with unparalleled experience in how values inform scientific and political debates over animal and environmental protection.

According to the book announcement…

‘Our planet is in the midst of a biodiversity crisis. More species are being lost more rapidly than ever before. Many view it as the sixth mass extinction to hit planet Earth, but this one is quite different. Unlike previous events, it is being caused not by some unavoidable catastrophe, but rather by the activities and behaviour of one superabundant, virtually omnipresent and dominant species - Homo sapiens. If maintenance of biodiversity is a primary goal of the conservation movement, then the movement is failing.

In principle, the ongoing loss of species can still be greatly reduced or curtailed. But in order for that to happen, we need a new conservation paradigm. That paradigm must acknowledge the lessons of history, the realities of the present, and what can be anticipated with reasonable certainty in the coming decades. It also must cope with inevitable and inescapable uncertainties in a prudent and precautionary manner.

That message and the thinking behind it is the subject of a new book, co-authored by participants in an international forum organized by the International Fund for Animal Welfare and the University of Limerick, in June 2004. The book, Gaining Ground: In Pursuit of Ecological Sustainability, contains 26 chapters written by a variety of conservationists, spanning the fields of conservation biology, fishery science, wildlife biology, ethics, economics, engineering, and the social sciences. The authors come from such diverse places as Australia, Africa, Canada, the Caribbean, Europe, India, and the United States. The contents should be of interest to all conservationists, including academics, undergraduates and graduate students, educators, wildlife managers, policy makers, and all people concerned about the current state of the planet and the human condition, and our attempts to achieve ecological sustainability’.

Lavigne, D.M. (ed.). 2006. Gaining Ground: In Pursuit of Ecological Sustainability. International Fund for Animal Welfare, Guelph, Canada, and the University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland.

For details on availability, contact forum@ifaw.org or visit www.ifaw.org/forum.

Search for Orphaned Pets (by William Lynn)

katrina-home.jpgKetzel Levine, a reporter for National Public Radio (NPR), has an excellent report entitled ‘Search for Lost Pets Continues in Louisiana’. (Friday 15 Oct 2005). In the course of her story, she reveals the speciesism and false dilemmas that plague decisions to separate human and non-human family members during a disaster.

If you would like to contribute to the search, rescue, evacuation, reuniting or adopting of companion animals in this disaster, I recommend you visit the following websites.

International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), www.ifaw.org.

Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), www.hsus.org.

United Animal Nations (UAN), www.uan.org.

If you would like to contribute to helping the human survivors of Katrina, please see the posts that preceed this essay.

Bill

Photo: From NPR website.

IWC 2005, Colorado Springs (by William Lynn)

iwc2005.jpgOctober looks like its going to be a particularly busy month, so please forgive me if I don’t maintain regular postings during this time….

Currently I’m in Colorado Springs at IWC 2005, a conference sponsored by the International Wolf Center in Ely, MN (www.wolf.org). This years conference theme is ‘Frontiers of Wolf Recovery’.

The southwest is a hotspot of wolf recovery. Hot because of its potential to improve landscape health, a huge region suitable for wolf recolonization and reintroduction (e.g. Blue Range, Sky Island Range, Southern Rockies), the collusion of federal, state and grazing interests to undercut Mexican Wolf recovery, and a violent anti-wolf campaign.

The organizers have made unexpected ‘adjustments’ to our session on the ethics of wolf recovery. I’ll post a short report on our session and the conference as soon as I am able.

cheers, Bill