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Contents
THE GEOLOGIC TIME SCALE
PROLOGUE: WE HAVE NO IDEA WHAT WE’RE IN FOR
Part I VISIT TO THE PAST
1 A MASS EXTINCTION: THE CRIME SCENE
2 ORIGINAL SYNERGY
3 THE GROUND BELOW THE THEORIES
4 EVOLVING OUR WAY TOWARD ANOTHER SPECIES
Part II WARNING: DANGER AHEAD
5 WARNING SIGN I: THE SOIL
6 WARNING SIGN II: OUR BODIES
7 WARNING SIGN III: SQUID AND SPERM WHALES
Part III NO-MAN’S-LAND
8 THE END
9 THE LONG RENEWAL
10 TROUBLED SEAS: THE FUTURE OF THE OCEANS
11 PREDATORS WILL SCRAMBLE
Part IV NOW WHAT?
12 THE DECLINE AND RETURN OF MEGAFAUNA
13 INVADERS TO MARS?
14 IS HUMAN EVOLUTION DEAD?
15 BEYOND HOMO SAPIENS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ABOUT MICHAEL TENNESEN
NOTES
SELECTED SOURCES
INDEX
To Annabelle, my mother, who loved the oceans, the mountains, the deserts, the birds, the animals, and the people.
Every part of this soil is sacred in the estimation of my people. Every hillside, every valley, every plain and grove, has been hallowed by some sad or happy event in days long vanished.
—Chief Seattle, 1854
We live in a zoologically impoverished world, from which all the hugest and fiercest and strangest forms have recently disappeared.
—Alfred Russel Wallace, 1876
Prologue
WE HAVE NO IDEA WHAT WE’RE IN FOR
IT WAS MID-MORNING, June, during the tropical dry season, as the Peruvian army Mi-17 helicopter lifted us off from a military base near the town of Ayacucho, Peru, on the western side of the Andes Mountains and slowly ascended toward the crest of the magnificent range. The expansive dry terrain below was spotted with cactus, shrubs, and wide stretches of open space, interrupted only by small villages covered in a fine layer of the local dust.
These slopes constitute the eastern boundary of the Atacama Desert, one of the driest spots on earth. It gave no hint of the verdant rain forest that awaited us just beyond the summit of the Andes. But as the helicopter crested the mountains, the eyes of the passengers—a military crew and an international team of scientists—opened wide at the sudden appearance of the headwaters of the Amazon River and the thick blanket of deep green vegetation that cloaked the mountains on this much wetter terrain.
Inside the helicopter, the group of celebrated biologists, part of the Rapid Assessment Program, had been sent here by the Washington, DC–based environmental group Conservation International to do a quick and dirty survey of the wildlife in the tropical forest region of the Vilcabamba, one of several mountain ranges within the eastern Andes under threat by oil and mining interests. Conservation International wanted to know if the area was rich enough in the number of plant and animal species to warrant the use of the group’s limited funds to save it. The more species there were, the more likely that some would survive the current environmental crisis.
I sat with the scientists on uncomfortable metal benches bolted to the wall, gear piled high around us. Most were dressed in khakis with an assortment of high-top boots, a few beards, and several parkas. They all tried to peer out the cloudy glass portals and the open door of the cabin, excited by their first look at the tropical forest they’d come to study. A Peruvian soldier, wearing no seat belt, one arm hooked through a wall handle adjacent to the open door, was perched dangerously with his legs and gun dangling out the helicopter. Insurgents had wounded one of his comrades the day before, and he scanned the forest below, looking for trouble.
Our view stretched eastward over the Amazon Basin where the sun had already begun to heat the tropical forest, turning its moisture into towering thunderheads, which by noon would begin to assault the eastern face of the Andes with wave upon wave of mist and rain. The result of all this water was a lush tropical menagerie, an area scientists consider to be the most biologically diverse of all the remaining forests on earth. The enormous number of species of fauna and flora in the Andes and in the adjoining Amazon Basin is as vital to the health of the tropics as it is to the world. This area gave birth to many of the terrestrial plants and animals on earth and is thus responsible for much of the world’s species diversity—its “biodiversity.” Scientists tell us that nature is currently heading toward one of the major catastrophes of its existence, a deadly crisis brought on by the land use activities of man, resulting in the plummet of species numbers. Our best hope and why so many scientists were aboard this helicopter was that the tropics could serve as a repository from which nature could resurrect replacements in the future.
There is reason and precedent for this hope, which is why these scientists are studying this specific landscape: during past ice ages, for example, most Andean animals and plants moved down from the precipices and held out in isolated pockets of rain forest at lower elevations. While glaciers scoured much of the earth, closer to the poles, destroying all life that could not get out of the way, the Andes and the Amazon functioned as a warm safe haven from this frozen assault.
Today, the eastern Andes Mountains is one of the few places on earth where new species, animals not yet discovered by science, still abound. The area is classified as a global hot spot, a terrain with dense biodiversity, featuring many species found nowhere else in the world. It is in areas like this, in dark and difficult corners of the globe that scientists hope nature might survive man’s current assault, and new species could reappear.
The mountainous terrain below our helicopter featured an area known as “cloud forest” where trees were shrouded in mosses and ferns. The canopies were filled with orchids and bromeliads that cast their roots into the leaves and humus in the crooks of the trees or into the bark of the branches in place of dirt.
Many of the species here had what Wake Forest University biologist Miles Silman described as “shoestring distributions.” The area where they can grow and reproduce may stretch horizontally for hundreds of miles but vertically only a few hundred feet. “I can throw a rock over the elevational distribution of some of these plants,” said Silman. He fears that climate change could push species uphill too fast for them to adapt.
There is a reason they call this “cloud forest.” It could take several days to land in such an area because of the constant cloud cover. The first day we tried, our army helicopter was turned back by the weather, and the pilot decided to visit the Asháninka Indians instead. Tribal members all came out to greet us. Their faces and arms were streaked with berry juice, a jungle version of makeup. A woman offered us chicha, a liquid made from yucca that is masticated and fermented by the tribal women, which the pilot told us to accept, to avoid gravely insulting the community. The Asháninka still took game from the local forests and fish from nearby streams.
On the third day, the clouds finally broke and we landed. I was one of the first people out of the helicopter, and my boots sank deeply into the boggy soil. I turned to the scientist behind me and told her I thought this was the wrong place. But she would have non
e of my hesitancy. “This is it,” she said, and gestured for me to get going. Within hours we’d unloaded the gear and hacked our way with machetes through the forest to a knoll where we cleared an area and set up a functional though very damp camp.
The tropical Andes contain about a sixth of the world’s plant life in less than 1 percent of its land area. White-faced monkeys, spider monkeys, and mantled howler monkeys swing through the trees and fill the damp air with their screams and roars. Puma, bear, white-lipped peccaries, and mountain tapirs patrol the woods looking for dinner, while the birds, bats, and butterflies shadow their movements. There are more than 1,724 species of birds in an area the size of New Hampshire—better than double the number found in Canada and the US combined.
The Vilcabamba Range is cut off from the surrounding mountains by the deep valleys of the Apurímac and Urubamba Rivers. Rising like an island in a sea of jungle, it is as isolated as an island surrounded by ocean.
Life is unique in the tropics. Animals often specialize, living off a single plant or groups of plants. Some flowers have long, curved tubes that can only be pollinated by certain species of hummingbirds with similarly curved bills. But there are also cheaters, like the flowerpiercer, a bird that can use its hooked bill like a beer can opener, notching little holes at the bases of flowers so that it, as well as bees and small hummingbirds, can get at the nectar without having to go through the flowers’ long tubes.
One night about a week into our trip when the rains started coming down, the resident herpetologist Lily O. Rodríguez and I put on headlamps and headed out into the deluge looking for new species, since rains brought out the different frogs and amphibians. Rodríguez started telling me stories about how these animals learn to specialize in the face of intense competition. She said that some of the frogs here don’t have tadpoles; they sit on their eggs like chickens. Other frogs store their tadpoles in leaves above streams into which the tadpoles fall once they hatch. And then some tadpoles have huge mouths to hold on to their favorite rocks when the streams run too fast.
The rains grew heavier and we put on waterproof army ponchos over Gore-Tex parkas. But this didn’t stop Rodríguez from climbing out on a wet, slippery tree limb when she thought she heard a new frog croak. She found nothing out on the tree limb that night, but she came across twelve new species in the course of our four-week visit.
The wonder of evolution is exemplified in these rarefied, verdant corners, where life adapts to tiny ecological niches of nature that require elaborate maneuvers for others to take advantage of. The question is: Will nature provide the necessary niches and maneuvers to meet the future? Will the tropics be part of the rescue, if there is one? And will modern man be along for the ride?
The palpable haste of modern biologists is due partly to the fear that we may be at the start of a mass extinction event—a loss of over 75 percent of plant and animal species. Such events have occurred only five times in the past 600 million years, when animals first appeared in the fossil record. And now scientists suggest that a sixth mass extinction may be under way, given the known species losses over the past few centuries and millennia. A recent report in the science journal Nature from biologists at the University of California, Berkeley, states that we could reach the extreme of a mass extinction in as little as three centuries from now if current threats to species are not alleviated.
It took Homo sapiens less than 200,000 years to reach a burgeoning population of one billion in 1800, but by 2000 we topped off at six billion, and by 2045 we are projected to reach nine billion. It is an unprecedented surge of growth, with unimaginable risks and innumerable side effects—the wellspring of a raging crisis.
And yet it is a dilemma man appears to ignore, though it is becoming more difficult to disregard as the list of earth’s endangered plants and animals keeps growing due to our multiple assaults on the environment. We have become a deadly virus to nature.
Our massive overpopulation and accompanying decimation of earth’s natural resources, if pursued unabated, may lead to man’s own demise. Yet, as great as our footprint has been, from a geological perspective, we’ve done all this damage in a brief moment. If one looks at the entire history of earth as a twenty-four-hour day, we only entered the picture around the last seconds of that day. We work fast.
Of course, earth will recover, no matter how devastating our brief visit here. After all, just because it may mean the end of man, it won’t be the demise of all biological life. Life is resilient. Plants, animals, and microbes will survive, adapt, diversify, and proliferate. New plants will evolve to vanquish our monocultures of corn, wheat, and rice. With far fewer animals around, those species that survive the bottleneck of extinction will move into newly abandoned spaces. With little competition, they will thrive and rapidly evolve.
It’s all happened before.
Recoveries followed all the mass extinctions, no matter their causes. The Ordovician extinction event 443 million years ago destroyed 86 percent of species with a barrage of alternating glacial cycles. The Devonian event 359 million years ago took out 75 percent of species with a one-two punch of global cooling and global warming. The Permian event 252 million years ago destroyed 96 percent of species with a Siberian supervolcano. The Triassic event 200 million years ago took out 80 percent of species with a combination of global warming and ocean acidification. The Cretaceous event 65 million years ago destroyed 76 percent of species with the impact of an asteroid. Though we have identified the prime suspects here, each of these mass extinctions had multiple causes.
The best known, the Cretaceous extinction 65 million years ago, was the primary result of an asteroid impact, though it had help from a supervolcano, the Deccan Traps in India—traps being large regions of volcanic rock with step-like plateaus and mountains that are typical of flood basalt eruptions. The Permian extinction 252 million years ago, the child of a volcano, also had help from the collapse of ocean currents, among other causes. Yet, despite their enormous destruction, the Permian extinction opened the door for the dinosaurs, and the Cretaceous extinction opened the door for mammals and man.
Extinction is a powerful creative force, says Douglas H. Erwin, a paleobiologist at the Smithsonian Institution. In his book Extinction: How Life on Earth Nearly Ended 250 Million Years Ago he writes, “From the wreckage of mass extinctions the survivors are free for bursts of evolutionary creativity, changing the dominant members of the ecological communities, and enabling life to move off in new and unexpected directions.”
Anthony Barnosky, a professor of integrative biology at the University of California, Berkeley, and principal author of the Nature paper, says that the critical component in determining if we are headed toward a mass extinction event is the status of critically endangered, endangered, and vulnerable species. “With them, Earth’s biodiversity remains in pretty good shape compared to the long-term biodiversity baseline. But if most of them die, even if their disappearance is stretched out over the next 1,000 years, the sixth mass extinction will have arrived,” he says.
He thinks that if we save the species now considered in trouble, we may have a chance. But our work at saving endangered species has resulted in many cases of what paleontologists refer to as “dead clade walking”—“clade” meaning groups of organisms. An example of lingering species is the California condor, which is threatened by lead poisoning, lethal pesticides, and expanding urban areas. It has cost millions of dollars and countless hours of work to preserve critical habitat, raise captive birds, and release them to the wild—but will the California condor be here for the next thousand years?
And if so, will other birds survive the bottleneck of mass extinction? Will reptiles, fish, insects, mammals, and perhaps even man survive? And how will they differ from the current versions of their species? That is what we will investigate here.
This book looks at past extinction events, the evolution of man and nature, evolutionary changes already under way, and the evolutionary changes likely to oc
cur. Our title, The Next Species, is used in its plural sense. We are interested in the next species of marine and terrestrial animals as much as we are in the next species of man. The research was built on scientific papers, books, as well as personal visits and interviews with experts. Its vision is based on fossil evidence from the past, studies of the present, and expert predictions of the future.
I visited more than seventy scientists from Harvard, MIT, Duke, the Smithsonian Institution, the American Museum of Natural History, UC Berkeley, Stanford, the University of Indiana, the University of London, Oxford University, the Max Planck Institutes, and more. We spoke on the phone with many others.
Many, like Hans-Dieter Sues, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Smithsonian, think that extinction is a normal process of life. “Virtually 99.999 percent of all life on the planet has gone extinct,” says Sues. “And so will Homo sapiens. Maybe in one thousand years we will have figured out how to do interstellar travel, so if things go haywire down here, we can take off and go somewhere else. But it’s just as possible we will mess around with our own genome and create some sort of race of superhumans, and they’ll drive us to extinction.”
This book looks around the world for lessons in evolution. What can past mass extinctions teach us? Can pristine ecosystems exist in war zones and nuclear accidents? What can 30,000-year-old fossils under Los Angeles tell us about the diversity of life? Will scientists rewild the Americas and Europe with elephants, cheetahs, and lions? Will jellyfish and giant squid dominate the oceans? Does disease fester in a world devoid of its native species? And what about the chances of an escape to Mars?
We’ll also explore the possibility of other forms of life evolving. Could isolation in the wake of a mass extinction provide the evolutionary opportunity for another species of man? Will genetics provide our children with better minds, longer lives, and unique bodies? Or will scientists figure out how to upload the human mind, making our bodies obsolete, so that we live on as robots or avatars in a virtual world.
The Next Species: The Future of Evolution in the Aftermath of Man Page 1