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The Great Migration Crisis
Many of the birds that migrate to Britain and Europe from Africa every spring, from the willow warbler to the cuckoo, are undergoing alarming declines, new research shows.
The falls in numbers are so sharp and widespread that ornithologists are waking up to a major new environmental problem - the possibility that the whole system of bird migration between Africa and Europe is running into trouble.
It is estimated that, each spring, 16 million birds of nearly 50 species pour into Britain to breed from their African winter quarters, and as many as five billion into Europe as a whole, before returning south in the autumn. Many are songbirds weighing next to nothing, and their journeys of thousands of miles, including crossing the Sahara desert each way, have long been recognised as one of the world's most magnificent natural phenomena on the scale of the Gulf Stream or the Indian monsoon. But now their numbers are tumbling precipitately.
Well-loved migrants such as the spotted flycatcher, the garden warbler and the turtle dove are increasingly failing to reappear in the spring in places where they have long been familiar. Across Britain, many people who used to look forward each year to hearing the first cuckoo - just about now, in the third week of April - no longer have the chance to do so. If fewer and fewer birds are returning to their breeding grounds, the inevitable consequence is that their populations will shrink ever more rapidly, ultimately, towards extinction. That may still be a long way off for the global populations of many migrants, but in Britain, several species are heading towards disappearance.
This worrying prospect is outlined in the first full statistical account put together by experts seeking to understand what is happening and why. Figures in an unpublished survey produced by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds paints a startling picture of plunging populations. Of the 36 British-African migrant species for which there is long-term population data (going back to 1967), 21 have declined significantly.
These include the two species which have become extinct in Britain in the same period - the red-backed shrike and the wryneck, the only migratory woodpecker - and another 11 which have suffered declines of more than 50 per cent.
This "50 per cent plus" group includes both the willow warbler and the cuckoo, with declines of 60 and 59 per cent, while at the top end of the scale, the spotted flycatcher, the tree pipit and the turtle dove have suffered declines of 84, 83 and 82 per cent respectively. For the 42 migrants for which there are short-term population trends available (going back only to 1995), 23 have declined - 55 per cent of the total. This includes a 30 per cent decline of the cuckoo, a 43 per cent decline of the pied flycatcher, and a 60 per cent decline of the wood warbler, just in the past 13 years.
The study, compiled by the RSPB research biologist Steven Ewing and likely to be published later this year, goes on to show that this pattern is not confined to Britain. It is being repeated across Europe as a whole, from Spain to Finland, with 27 out of 37 European-African migratory species for which there is reliable long-term population data - 72 per cent of the total - undergoing declines.
These include species such as the nightingale, which is showing one of the severest declines with a 63 per cent drop in numbers across Europe between 1980 and 2005.
In Britain, the nightingale is now such a rare bird that it is not picked up in standard monitoring schemes, meaning there is no reliable population data for the species. But there is no doubt that it is also declining here.
No one knows the reasons for these disappearances, which may be many and complex, although theories being discussed include habitat degradation in Africa and climate change. But they are pointing firmly to the possibility that, after millions of years the Afro-European bird migration system is going fundamentally wrong. The problem may be on the birds' journeys, which are full of hazards, or on their wintering grounds south of the Sahara. Ornithologists from all over Europe will meet in Germany next month to discuss both the vanishing migrants, and the possibility of setting up a network of research stations in Africa to investigate what is happening.
The meeting, at the Radolfzell bird observatory on Lake Constance, has been organised by two scientists, Volker Salewski from Radolfzell and Will Cresswell from the University of St Andrews. "With a large number of our migrant species which are suffering declines, you don't have to look all that far into the future for when the lines on the graph cross zero," Dr Cresswell said. In Britain, the RSPB and the British Trust for Ornithology are switching their attention from farmland birds, whose declines because of intensive agriculture have long been a major concern, to focus on the startling fall-off in migratory bird numbers. Both are actively planning new research programmes concentrating on migrants.
"We are seeing some very marked declines in migrants, which are giving us real cause for concern," said Dr David Gibbons, the RSPB's head of conservation science. "These birds form a huge part of our native avifauna and we need to help them before they disappear from the British and European countryside."
© 2008 The Independent



65 Comments so far
Show AllAll sort of canaries in the mines of many types stop singing these days.
Now most of the migrating birds are becoming canaries silently singing of human ecological abuse.
Sad.
Hoa binh
What is that story about frogs in boiling water?
Are there similar studies going on in the Americas? We (in the Great Lake region) have been seeing major declines in many species of once plentiful bird populations, with little explanation so far from the scientific community.
Silent Spring is a book written by Rachel Carson and published by in September 1962. In it she sounded the alarm about the harm pesticides were doing to the natural world, and it lead in part to the banning of DDT and other deadly poisons. Even though their use was curtailed in the US, the corp had no problems marketing their poisons to the third world.
Along with Bee colony collapse, we are seeing the first signs of cancer in the body of Mother Nature. Or should I say, WE are the cancer in the body of Mother Nature, and pieces of her glory are falling way.
We are shitting in our own nest, and there will be hell to pay.
This kills birds and bees too. It's everywhere and is used and gleefully tested daily everywhere by 29 countries.
http://www.gulfwarvets.com/du_blowinginthewind.htm
We live in the mountins in the southwest in a hidden valley and there are two mountain streams which snake through our property where thousands of oak and mesquite trees thrive. __ It used to be a bird and wildlife paradise.
Three years ago we counted 78 different specie of birds at our feeders and bird baths, We were a little concerned because it was less than normal. Every year there were fewer and instead of large flocks, sometimes we'd see only one or two of a specie.
Last year we counted eleven different specie and no longer see any javalina, deer, fox or squirrles. There were no pollinating inscets, bats and few hummingbirds last year and no nuts on the oaks and no beans on the mesquite trees.
Must be Mother Nature? ____ but I never knew Mother Nature was a flock of selfish and foolish humans.
Obviously something is amiss and as seems to be the case lately many are taken aback at how rapidly change occurs, but this should not be a surprise. With many "relationships and systems" there is an activation energy required to trigger quantum-like change. Once the activation energy is reached, the changes then unfold most rapidly and unpredictably until a new steady-state is achieved.
The canary in the coal mine has perished. Diminishing diversity indicates ecosystems under stress. "Business as usual" is synonymous with death in the coal mine. Don't you think?
I know I'm "preaching to the choir" a bit here, but is it going to take suffering for humans equivalent to the apparent collective suffering of these many bird species for folks to wake up and realize momentous adjustments in day-to-day living are necessary - particularly in the "industrialized" countries? Perhaps, but then of course, it might be too late. Don't you think?
I think those who refuse to recognize the obvious or who obstinately hold-on to essentially proven flawed mindsets (such as current-day "free market capitalism" gone amok), or who think they can control the quantum changes, will face the most harsh indiscriminate consequences of the quantum changes that are just now beginning. Those who are trying to prepare and who recognize "business as usual" is a death sentence for future generations, might have a better chance.
These birds are telling us something.
Peace,
Ken
First off, bee colony collapse is partly the commercial guys pushing their bees beyond their collective breaking point. The organic beekeepers, while they still have the usual problems, are not reporting any trouble at all with CCD.
That said, too much Roundup and other new wave pesticides may be killing beneficial insects too. There are fundamental problems with genetically modified crops, but building a pesticide like BT into a crop is a double disaster. We never see the birds die of pesticides because sick birds always hide, then die, then some local predators or micropredators get rid of the evidence. People who rescue birds are considerably more aware of mass pesticide-induced sicknesses among birds.
Yes, climate is affecting bird feeding patterns, just as climate is affecting polar bear feeding patterns. When the chicks hatch, too often the peak food was 10 days too early. No food, no migration.
I suspect that people in Africa (or anywhere else) will eat everything if they're hungry enough.
Hope dies last, but this quaint little story is horrifying when connected to the other recent environmental news.
For example, last night I saw a program on permafrost in the far north of Finland. In a large, usually frozen lake, the methane from the melted seabed is literally bubbling up and into the air 24 hours a day. This is probably happening everywhere across Siberia and north Canada. Methane, being 10 times worse for greenhouse heat-trapping, is bad news for us. I don't think any climate change predictions go anywhere near to what this could mean. It was like watching a horror film.
Considering all the environment manipulation and damage done by the growing mass of human kind, the next wave of lethal human epidemics will be greatly appreciated by birds, bugs and bats.
~STILBA~ ___THANK YOU. ___ You have just pounded the biggest nail, the most serious problem humanity faces with a sledge hammer, the MOST serious problem and issue. Indeed it is a HORROR, but it's not a film, it's as real as the sunset every evening.
I'm going to offer a link here on that subject, an article written by a world renouned geologist, which takes about TWO MINUTES of our precious time to read. When the article was written in 2004, scientists were estimating this problem would become a serious issue within a hundred or so years.
Well, the scientists were correct, it would become a major problem, but they were off by their years estimates by about eighty or more. Take the time to read this and realize we must start right NOW to attempt to correct it and we can do that if we put our minds and money into it. ___If we deny it, ___ ignore it, ___ we deny and die. Which sadly, includes our children and theirs if any.
http://www.energybulletin.net/3647.html
Is there contact information for the organizers of the event? Who is encouraged to attend? Conversely, how is participation and/or attendance limited? If one is interested in attending, what's the process for registering? Thank you!
Even the birds have enough sense not to return to Great Britain. It shows good reasoning on their part not to go there. England is a war mongering place that lives off of imperialiam and genocide, just like the U.S. The birds are avoiding us now too.
Hi ~Doom and Gloom~. Have you read of how much DU drifted to Great Britian from Afganistan, Kosovo and Iraq? ___ Amazing. DU kills humans over time, it kills bird populatins a heck of a lot faster. ___ Like the canaries in the mines.
Like Buffalo Ken said, we're preaching to the choir, but here go....
Does it really matter what "scientifically" is happening to the birds? The issue is a symptom of the larger problem, and that is, you guessed it, the way we treat the earth and her creatures. We can start talking all day about "what is happening to the birds, what is happening to the bees, what is going to happen to the polar bears, what is happening to the blue-fin tuna, what is happening to walruses, etc, etc. We know what is happening! Its not just the European Migrant Birds! It is almost every living system on the planet! We are into the opening stages of a massive, global die-off. This die-off will continue to exponentiate until "business-as-usual" is a far-off, historical note.
It is time for the next stage of Earth's evolution. Are you going to become a participant in mankind's step towards this divine fate? Or are you going to sit back and party till the bus hits the wall?
We need to dismantle mankind's grandest creation - the all-consuming materialistic paradigm - and return God's most divine creation -LIFE- back to the top of the world order.
This is insane.
Birds? Here is a small sample of what is truly happening to our birds:
Spoon-billed sandpiper on brink of extinction (10/14/2007)
(MSNBC/Associated Press) Russians find 70 percent drop in breeding pairs; loss of feed sites blamed.
Egg hunters pushing Chinese seabird to extinction (09.21.2007)
(MSNBC/Associated Press) The Chinese crested tern, a rare sea bird whose eggs are prized by some as a delicacy, is likely to be extinct in five years if authorities do not step up protection efforts, a conservation group said Friday.
Halved: 20 U.S. bird species seen in decline (06.14.2007)
(MSNBC/Assoc. Press) The populations of nearly two dozen common American birds - the fencesitting meadowlark, the frenetic Rufous hummingbird and the whipporwill with its haunting call - are half what they were 40 years ago, a new analysis found.
Survey: Fifth of bird species face extinction
(MSNBC) More than a fifth of the planet's bird species face extinction as humans venture further into their habitats and introduce alien predators, a conservation group said on Wednesday. 6/1/2005 9:53 AM
US red knot shore bird could be extinct in 5 years
(MSNBC) The latest count of red knot, a shore bird that migrates via New Jersey beaches, shows it is on course for extinction within five years, scientists said on Wednesday. 5/25/2005
Rare bird may have just gone extinct (12.01.2004)
One of Earth's rarest birds might have gone into extinction following the death of one of the last known po'ouli.
Farmland birds in crisis
(BBC) A team of British researchers is calling for reform of Europe's agricultural policy to allow birds and other wild creatures a greater chance of survival. 8/12/1999
1 in 10 bird species faces extinction by 2100
About 10 percent of all bird species face extinction by the end of the century and another 15 percent are on the brink, according to researchers who say such extinctions would have a widespread impact on the environment, agriculture and human society.
December 13, 2004
Humans Are Driving Birds to Extinction, Group Warns
Conservationists warn that many birds face the same fate as their prehistoric ancestors, the dinosaurs. But it isn't an asteroid or volcanic eruption that's threatening to finish them off. The culprit, they say, stares at us from the bathroom mirror every day.
Shocking figures reveal sad plight of birds
One out of every eight of the world's 10 000 different bird species are now threatened with extinction.
World's Wading Birds Are Vanishing Fast, Experts Warn
Waders are getting into deep water, in some cases to the point where there's no turning back. That's the conclusion of bird experts meeting recently in Cadiz, Spain, to assess the current status of waders around the world.
Tailspinning Bird Populations Highlight Biodiversity Crisis
Washington, D.C.—Bird populations around the world are plummeting faster than ever before, and human factors—from population growth to habitat destruction and climate change—are at the center of this demise, reports a new study from the Worldwatch Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based research organization.
Little help for 400 endangered bird species
Report: Third of all endangered bird species get few protections.
Quarter of U.S. Birds in Decline, Says Audubon
A quarter of all bird species in the United States have declined in population since the 1970s, according to a report issued by the National Audubon Society.
Kiwis 'freefall' to extinction
New Zealand's national symbol, the kiwi bird, could be almost extinct within five to 10 years, conservationists are warning.
Quarter of parrot species on brink
One parrot species in four is in danger of extinction, according to a study by two nature groups.
Taking a dive
A quarter of Asian bird species are of "conservation concern" and hundreds face extinction, bird conservationists warned on Tuesday
ASIA FACES BIRD EXTINCTION CRISIS
Tokyo, Japan, Tuesday 5th June, 2001 (UN World Environment Day). Hundreds of Asian bird species face extinction because of unsustainable human activities causing habitat loss and degradation, according to 'Threatened Birds of Asia: The BirdLife International Red Data Book'.
Alert for Asia's threatened birds
In a clarion call to save hundreds of Asian bird species from extinction, ornithologists have launched a crisis guide to the threats the animals face.
Climate change 'threatens Arctic birds'
A study of the impact of climate change on Arctic breeding water birds suggests that some species could be more than halved.
Farming 'threatens third of Europe's birds'
The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds says the expansion of intensive farming threatens more than one third of Europe's most important areas for birds.
Many threatened birds 'need help'
A third of the world's most threatened bird species still need urgent action in order to survive, campaigners say.
Albatross faces extinction
The albatross - that soaring marvel of the southern seas - could be about to take its last dive. British birdlovers will gather tomorrow to campaign to save a genus that most of them will never see.
Pirate fishing menaces albatross
Conservationists are predicting tragedy for 19 albatross species Pirate fishermen are driving the albatross to extinction, wildlife campaigners have warned.
Mountain birdlife 'under threat'
The relentless growth in human exploitation of mountainous areas means more than half of Europe's mountain birds are in danger, say experts.
Giant Philippine eagle perched on edge of extinction
DAVAO, Philippines (CNN) -- In the Philippines, every creature surely fears the airborne predator at the top of the food chain, the Philippine eagle. But even the world's largest bird of prey faces the risk of extinction.
Penguins in Peril
BOSTON, Massachusetts, December 7, 1998 (ENS) - An "alarming" decline of many of the world's penguin populations was revealed at a forum focusing on these flightless birds held Friday at the New England Aquarium. Four new species of penguins are now seen to be at risk of extinction according to a scientific report two years in the making.
Penguin Decline in Antarctica Linked With Climate Change
Emperor penguins like it cold. Now, scientists have determined that the penguins' susceptibility to climate change accounts for a dramatic decline in their number over the past half century.
India's Black Market in Birds Threatening Rare Species
India is home to some 1,200 different species of birds. Despite measures designed to protect this rich array of bird life by banning the capture and trade of wild birds, records indicate that as many as 300 of these species are caught and traded with impunity.
LINKS TO THE ABOVE ARTICLES CAN BE FOUND AT:
http://oneplanetonelife.com/main/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=33&Itemid=49#birds
WAKE UP YOUR NEIGHBORS! THIS IS REAL, IT IS URGENT, AND IT IS NOT WHAT GOD, OR WHATEVER YOU CALL HIM, INTENDED FOR US TO DO WITH HIS CREATION!
No violence, no judging, just a swift, peaceful, rational, compassionate, loving, caring, relentless pursuit of doing what it takes to make things right.
Let's get on with this thing already.
Will
All of life is being impacted by the human paradigm that the world is our to exploit. And exploit we do, from the forests to the deserts, from the lakes to the oceans (I'm especially in utter horror of what is happening to the oceans), human are turning Earth into a mass grave, and we justify it by religion, business, and by our own selfish desire to live in luxury. What's for dinner? How about sushi? I haven't eaten it all week! Totally ignorant to the destruction each net does the the ecosystem and the wanton destruction of all the creatures swept up in the nets that provide fresh tuna to seafood eaters. We bitch and moan about how sad our actions are, then we go to the store or a restaurant, and we buy the very cruelty we laminate. I'm so sorry to all the creatures I've caused harm to by my actions. I went vegetarian and I try to only by organics, but it's hard considering how expensive it is to be a conscious consumer these days.
One of the reasons birds migrate is that latitudes farther from the equater have longer summer days than the equator. Declines in bird poulations caused by human activities are likely dominated by intensive monocropping agriculture practices for meat production. In such schemes, biodiversity which supplies birds with a variety of food, is shifted from its natural maximum down to near zero. This is yet another in a long list of reasons for shifting human food production away from monocropping and toward the forest home garden model.
Other motives driving monocropping include capitalist food (IN)security strategies, industrial food processing, and marketing schemes for the over-consumption of capitalist-controlled paper, textiles and increasingly biofuels production, all seriously problematic.
All of these materials may be produced in the natural setting at modest volumes with modest changes in the ecosystems. These include modest forest thining and variety selection programs. A back to the wilds agriculture revolution preserves the biosphere and human health in a complete way.
Frogs have been disappearing for a long time, in some places they are being replaced by other species, some places it is toads. That is not a good sign.
WE who are writing here are pained by the governmental inaction world-wide to these clear indication that we are killing the planet rapidly. Beside looking here for the others who are thinking like we, what else are you doing to take a pro-active direction to confront the entire partnership between the global economic markets and the environment that takes a back seat to these issues?
We look at the election taking place here on the American landscape and the references to the environment but not to the grave condition of the life on this planet and the future of humanity excepting how it will support consumers and industry. We are on a collision course with human extinction and the animal population of every kind is under stress from human actions and the toxicity, as the article above shows clearly. But we also know of all the other animals we are killing. This brings attention to the facts that many know here. We know that it is not only the animals but the human race as well.
The war in Iraq grinds on with the politicians just doing what they do, talking drivel and not really understanding, as many of us do here, the deep necessity for global action and a solid shock to the complacency that is everywhere rampant. WEe know that there is less chance for change happen now with people being starved out of existence and forced out of their homes and forced ever more to scratch for survival.
The opening statement of my film is: "We can not ask a man trying desperately to feed his family to care about the environment"! This seems the way it is going not only in Africa where I recently returned from but now in North America with Europe and Asia not far behind.
The corporate and government juggernaut lumbers along impervious to all the shouting done by the people who want change quickly, as the person above who shouts to have happen. We all have a front row seat to the coming catastrophe roped into the rollercoaster going down the plunge and seeing the rails below ripped apart.
SikWilly: Thanks so very much for the great summary on our feathered friends status around the world.
Mankind needs to learn a different way, it needs to watch and listen to the birds or we will follow thier path to extinction. We already are losing our minds.
Thanks ~WILL~, great information. How to do it, correct the problem which as you so rightfully stated, is an emergency. A world wide emergency and a true crisis.
There is only one way, just ONE. Many believe (with ample justificaion) it is already too late. Well, if a madman is seen running towards your home, armed with an assault rifle, and you know he intends to murder you and your entire family, would we say it's too late to react? ___ Just deny it and give up?
___Global warming___ IS causing the methane in the Arctic regions to escape into our atmosphere as ~STILBA~ noted so well and as we all have been warned by the author of the article in the link I posted. If we honestly want to stop that disaster from running into our homes and kiiling all of us and all of our family, we have to correct the global warming problem, or at least give it a fair shot and do it now. the madman is getting very close and time is not in or favor.
We must have a (world-wide) effort to stop burnig fossil fuels and oil in our vehicles and ethanol will not help there BTW. It can be done IF our world leaders will lay down their swords and come together peacefully and agree to fight global warming, instead of each other.
A "MASSIVE" effort will be required to fight that necessary war. Is that feasible, logical, affordable and possible? Yes, indeed it is. Affordable? We spend trillions fighting unjust wars over oil, which is so damned ironic when one considers burning oil is the problem that will insure all life will soon be snuffed out if we don't stop burning it.
It's easily affordable, and working to create thousands of clean energy facilities, which will make electrical powered vehilcs affordable and electrical heated and cooled houses affordable, will also create many millions of much needed good paying jobs.
Feasible? The technology to develop geo-thermal, wind, solar, tidal and wave generated energy is a well proven fact. We just haven't given those viable and nonpolluting alternaties the necessary backing and funding to see any decent progress. The oil, coal and uranium barons have INSURED it is not done. The also have insured the ones they want running governmets are running them.
Is it logical? It is illogical to think otherwise, so it must be logical. We cannot have it both ways.
Is it possible? Well, lets consider just a few of many things which were possible when having or desiring to fight a word wide war. Here in America in 1942, we built the largest oil pipeline ever built, a 40 inch diameter tube named __"the big inch" __a MASSIVE project which ran from Texas to New Jersey, over hill and dale, across mighty rivers, streams, swamps and across or through mountains. It was operational in a year.
We opened a highway which ran all the way up through Alaska, __the "Alcon Highway"__. It was a rough road then, but it worked and it took less than a year's time to be functional. A MASSIVE project with men of every race, nationality and religion, working TOGETHER in horrible weather conditions. It was for a war.
One sad note was, the African Americans teams working on the Alcon, then called "negros" when being polite, were segregated. They busted their asses just as well as everyone else did. But that's another issue, except with a world-wide effort fighting the Global Warmng war, we had all better bust our asses together and segrgation is neither necessary nor logical.
The "Manhatten Project" another MASSIVE war tme project and many have been taught it was the largest and most expensive, but it wasn't. The producton of Boeings B-29 bomber was. Another MASSIVE job, well done and very very effective for what it was desingned to accomplish.
We mustered millions of men and women to fight that war, we clothed tem , housed tetehm trained them to fly sail and fight, we fed them, we supplied them with milions of ships, vehicls, weapons, cannon, fuel, and "cigaretts" and even mail and home made cookies. ___ We didn't lose the war.
Those are just a few of the MASSIVE projects we began and successfully completed in four years. Russia, Germany, Japan ,England, Canada, Australia, India China and many other nations also completed MASSIVE projects during that time period. Unfortuantly we were not all working togther to meet the same goals.
My point is not to glorify killing wars, but to demonstrate what is possible, afforable, if it is absoutely necessary. Developing clean energy would be a piece of cake in comparisson and it is absolutlely necessary that we begn to fight a war that is not a killling war.
It is logical, affordable, feasible and very possible, we could have totally clean energy within four years if we put our money and efforts into it. We'd better, that methane gas is neither a myth nor a joke and it's running towards ALL of our homes.
Birds was the issue here. It still is. The birds are telling us to correct it.
In my last post I didn't mention the birds to any degree. ___ The whales, the birds and bees are telling us to correct the global warming and DU problems and they are wiser than humans apparently.
A Malthusian Catastrophe
There are not as many birds here in the Eastern Sierra as there were ten years ago. It is as if we are experiencing the Silent Spring we have all dreaded for so long . . .
A student asked me today of I was "some kind of a tree hugger or something"?
I asked her to clarify the definition of a "tree hugger"? She made an attempt but couldn't even give a partial definition.
Part of the evil-greedy paradigm that humanity must change is the conservative stigma that paints environmentalism as negative.
It should be the other way around. Humanity must nurture serious social ramifications for greed both implicit or explicit in deed.
Thanks to assholes such as Rush Limbaugh, the male faculty in my high school thwart efforts to recycle and teach responsible habits. Americans act shamefully like spoiled children when it comes to environmentalism.
You can't have you cake and eat it too. The Bible teaches "give up all your possessions and help the poor" and "greed is the root of all evil" yet the Christian or Western nations are the greediest nations on earth.
China is trying to catch up just in time for the big human extinction...
The declining bird numbers are just one of the many indicators pointing towards big trouble.
WE, humans, are destroying everything.
The biggest problem facing human beings is that they have to be told there is a problem, that most people are so out of touch they have no idea there is a problem, or what they can do to restore balance. For starters, you can't just take, you have to give back (to the earth). You can examine that...how you give back is just as important as how you take.
Fewer birds here in the NW US also. Used to be crows all over the trees. Almost none now. Other birds too, even over 2 or 3 years quite a decline.
.
A religion which originally stood up against the Roman Empire became a part of it and has mostly acted as if they deserve to be greedy for centuries even after smaller segments of it broke away. Both the small groups and big groups are at fault. Most religions are not in trouble with the governments of the world because they are trying to make sure the world ends quickly.
Destroying the birds is just part of the overall plan of religion and government.
It's the job of government to destroy the world to save it. If there was such a thing as a real religion it would be attempting to stop the destruction of the planet and treat all fairly. But that's just so evil.
I reckon that after we have wrecked the planet, assuming the while that all our actions were divinely ordained, God might want to have a strong word with us all for having destroyed His creation. Kids hate having their toys broken.
I have to confess here that I am not in the least religious and I see the God construct as being like a very spoilt and manipulative child.
Heavy Runner - what we're looking at is much worse than a Malthusian Catastrophe. At least with an MC, a big drop in human population would solve the problem, because feeding the population is the only real problem. Mass famine would (and will) be horrible, but we'd survive it.
Global warming on the other hand (which, with every passing year, scientists find they have grossly underestimated), may wipe out most life on Earth even if every single human being disappeared today. As it stands, I can't see how we're going to "stop" what's happening ...even if we start trying, which I don't think we will. Before we're all gone, there will probably be a lot of famine. I just wish it were another century out so I wouldn't have to see it.
I went for a paddle in a marsh in Kashmir that is famous as a stopover place for migrating waterfowl. I was too late for the migrants, that didn't surprise me, but what did was that there were no local birds or animals out there at all. I'm used to marshes that are teeming with life, little plops and splashes of aquatic animals like muskrats,blackbirds hanging on to cattails, local ducks,loons and bitterns, just a constant series of little movements and sounds all around, mostly caught just out of the corner of an eye.
Here there was profound silence, the only motion reed cutters poling their boat off in the distance. The only bird I saw was a green heron flying way up high. My guide told me his father, a game warden, had shot one once. It tasted really good he said. He told me that there are never any birds in the marsh or on the river because people eat anything they they can catch.
We don't know what we are loosing.
KEM PATRICK
thank you kem and everyone else for your input and comments on this devastating problem. preaching to the choir. that's all we can do it seems. who else listens to what is going on? or cares how urgent this situation is? how many of us here on c.d. represent the whole of earth or even the western hemisphere? we are impotent, frustrated observers of the demise of our planet. there must be something we can do. little drops of water make a mighty ocean. we are the little drops. let's make a mighty ocean. come on all us c.dreamers. put our heads together and think of something to get us out of this quagmire. let's form a unique band. let's instigate some radical movement. let's beat the system. it can be done. we only have to think of the implentation. something to grasp everyone's attention. what is it? IKE KAY mentions his film. what is this film ike? where can we see it? what does it portray? can your film help the planet? i have witnessed the decline of migratory birds for many years in the middle east. i know this is the true situation. at one time we had days of european bee eaters and golden orioles resting on their way south. then the flocks became less and eventually the golden orioles never showed up and the bee eaters were few and far between. here in southern europe where i now live i haven't been able to study the birds' patterns as yet. we have pied wagtails (beautiful birds with black heads and blue feathers with long tails) who have been around for the past 5 months since i've been here. sparrows in abundance. blackbirds and swallows. and for a short time some bluetits. and other small darling little birds who would come down to the trees when i whistled to them. i rescued a sardian warbler on the side of the road one day. i don't know what ailed him but he was just sitting there, so i placed him in a secure area away from the traffic. and yes, these birds are telling us something. and we as responsible humans must do our utmost to help them. we are all connected.................little drops of water make a mighty ocean.
Coco
Birds are not that difficult to figure out, they need food and habitat to live. Where I live there is a lot of food so they are plentifull. As they cut down a lot of nesting places, they establish new territory. They are very vocal about thier mating territory and they cry when something goes wrong. They arrive here in large groups and use the telephone wires to purch, they are obviously distressed by traffic noise and the inability to forage. They have a plan b for events that disrupt things and they work cooperatively in groups. They talk to each other in the night and they remember things.
The more people, the less birds... except maybe for pigeons, starlings, vultures, rats, roaches and other scavengers.
ezeflyer
all creatures have an ecological significance and something to learn from. There are reasons for things that get out of balance...too many this and not enough of that...
ezeflyer
all creatures have an ecological significance and something to learn from. There are reasons for things that get out of balance...too many this and not enough of that...
COCO
Your right on target. We need to band together. There is a significant portion of the population that knows things are wrong. The problem is there is no central organized movement that these people (us) can gather under. The environmental movements are too fragmented and are focused too narrowly on specific issues, specific species, specific ecosystems. Politics of course won't touch it, corporations of course won't touch it. Religions are coming around, but conservative politics are still too influential.
As some of you know, my dream is to find or create this movement you speak of. I am attempting to do it through my organization One Planet, One Life, but man, the odds are stacked! I am a firefighter in the state of Florida struggling like everyone to pay the bills and I do not know if I will ever have the time to commit to this paradigm shift as I would want to.
I do not suscribe to the solicitation of my organization in forums like this and it makes me uncomfortable. I hope people understand that I am only trying to educate and push this shift for this is my intent. I am not in this for selfish reasons.
Please, if anybody has any ideas that I could incorporate into One Planet, One Life in order to centralize this movement, please advise. If anybody has resources, talents, etc that they would be willing to donate to this effort, please contact me.
I am desperate to save this ship before too much damage is done.
Will
http://www.oneplanetonelife.com
KEM PATRICK
Thank you for your comments, they are always insightful and enlightening. Keep up the faith!
Will
The METHANE crisis is frightening. China recently decides it is their answer to *clean* energy.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=89657242
When Darwin explored natural selection and survival of the fittest, he discovered that the honeycreeper finch, some five millions years before, was literally blown away from its native Hawaii habitat by a ferocious hurricane to distant islands hundreds of miles from home. From one species of that particular finch, twenty three others evolved. A hurricane is one thing -- this is another. Darwin contends that it is those that escape from the norm that ultimately survive.
As far as I can see, this article makes no mention of whether or not the birds are staying in Africa, or else disappearing. What a tragedy.
Everyone here has shared incredibly wise insights on this issue. Between birds, (the article a few weeks back here at Common Dreams about our North American songbirds being killed off in their migration north by South America's use of DDT), polar bears and the oil leases Bush decided to auction off to his pals in Alaska, our dwindling and tainted water supply, our contaminated foods, and the beat goes on, America has a lot to be proud of these days -- same holds true for GB. I have plenty of sympathy for my beloved creatures, birds, bears, and all the members of the plant and animal kingdoms. As for humanity, I hope somewhere in my heart I can have sympathy for them too, since, like it or not, I'm part of the goddamned species.
The frenetic rat-race is insane -- but too few realize this yet. People in California are drinking recycled sewage water -- the process is called "from toilet to tap." But this is not enough to wake them out of their stupid rest. Einstein was afraid, decades ago, that our technology had exceeded our humanity. What would he say today?
In 1924, 12 American Bison were taken to Catalina Island to make a movie. When the film crew left the island, the Bison remained and eventually grew to a herd of 600. This is the story of thier return to the Rosebud Rezervation. Tatanka going home.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6AW0e4sDROE
The right combination of a fungus and beetle has caused Sudden Oak Disease in millions of trees around the world. I work in a park and have seen mature beautiful oaks die within weeks.
Who says it can't happen to the entire system?
SikWilly, I don't mean to proselytize either, but there are politicians talking about climate change and environmental damage. They are in the Green Party.
If you dismiss us as too small to bother with, you contribute to the problem. Green politics can only grow and be effective if everyone who cares about the environment joins us and adds their voice.
Of course, we will never be promoted by the corporate media. That will not happen, so don't wait for it. We are speaking out on a local level wherever we are. We make coalitions with like minded people. We run candidates so that someone will be speaking for the environment, workers and peace issues.
You may be uncomfortable joining us because you are religious oriented. That's OK. Find some Greens in your community and work with them. Join your energy to theirs. You can do your thing and they can do their thing and when you work together, it will be beautiful.
COCO I'm sorry to tell you this because I'm happily married.
~I do love you.~
We can all do our little things to help the atmosphere, our precious oceans and our enviroment, as combined it will make a difference.
Unless we have a world widw MASSIVE program initiated soon,, very soon, to stop burning coal, cutting down our forests and destroying the oceans with pollution, what we do as individuals will not correct the one major thing that will end almost all life on Earth. The arctic's 400 gigatons of methane gas is that major issue.
The birds are crying out to us to stop, please stop!! You are killing all of us ___ and you're next.____ once again, here is the link in case any missed it.
http://www.energybulletin.net/3647.html
Read through all the comments. I was impressed by the sincerity and depth of the concern. At least people here understand that there's a problem and that something needs to be done.
I think leadership is called for. Environmental stewardship is not only important as a sociopolitical goal but vital to preserving this earth. The loss of migratory bird populations is indicative of broader trends. The possibility of Depleted Uranium and/or GMOs affecting wildlife in the short term and humans in the long term is plausible.
Leadership requires compromise but on the values of environmental preservation there can be no bending. Those that continue to contribute to the problem need to be directly confronted. Otherwise they will continue to get away with contributing to ongoing and worsening ecological disaster. Finally, if this world is being destroyed, the human race will need to find new planets on which to live. I know the escapist mindset may deter people from trying to save Earth, but if an end to life here is coming (I'm picturing instead a slow degradation) we'd better be ready to move...
At the speed of light, it would take 25,000 years to cross the Milky Way. We'd better fix the global warming issue first. But, maybe there ARE worm holes JB.
I understnd your point and it's well said. We cannot leave so we have to fix the mess we created before we all are gone but still here. Earth is unique, for it's the only water planet known to exist in the entire universe. There may be others, but we've never located any.
SikWilly and others, I am old enough to remember the black power fist salute by track star Tommy Smith and his buddy (to lazy to look up the name... oh, maybe it was Lee Evans?) in the Mexico Olympics in 68 (?). All they did was put on a black glove on their right hands and hold them up during the olympic medal ceremony. Christ you would have thought they attacked the World Trade Center, such a fuss was made about it. Certain official types still talk about it as one of the darkest days in olympic sport. In reality it was a powerfull and profound symbolic action that stated the black power movements passion and commitment to their cause.
My point is that it shocked people, most in a negative way. I have an Idea that would shock people again at the China olympics but hopefully in a more positive way. Simply put it would be for at least one and hopefully more of the top athletes to carry a one world flag (picture of planet earth from near space and can be found in stores and web sites) around the track (or what ever other venue) instead of their native countries flag. Or as a compromise, they could carry both flags, one of their country in the left hand and one of the one world planet earth in the right. It is possible it would catch on in a universally positive way and would become the "in thing" for other athletes to show solidarity with when their events came up.
I think it is a simple gesture that could possible break through some of the divisive nature of extreme nationalism and negative competition that is infecting the planet and become a powerful symbol of the one world were all in the the same boat consciousness. This realization could be a powerful first step that is so critically needed to address the unification that will be needed for an 11th hour healing if we and our fragile planet are to survive.
If the idea gets out there all it will take is for a few committed individuals to realize the transcendent importance of such an act for the well being of the people and our home planet. It would be easy enough for such a committed individual(s) to secretly pull off this divine caper as they could have a planet earth flag in their bag (or wherever) to be unfurled at a moments notice after winning the event. It would probably be better to execute this world survival move spontaneously upon winning the event and not later on at the medals ceremony where it would seem more artificial and planed.
I thought of this some time ago but never really acted on it, just thinking it was one of those passing daydreams that was getting in the way of my retired lifestyle - in short I'm lazy. Now I realize it just an idea, one like many others, that if it gets out there can get picked up by someone (an athlete or organizer) and they can do with it whatever they want. If the idea has any possible merit I don't really have to do anything as it will be carried forward to the next level by whomever..... Aloha
KEM PATRICK
it's ok. i won't tell your wife..........
SIK WILLY
that's very commendable willy. keep up the good work. as i said, i am in europe. i can't help physically or monetarily. but i do have talents that might be used. ok, i've just had an idea.............i'll write a play. a short play. i have a meeting next saturday with a film crew who are looking for actors/actresses. maybe i could suggest something to them. let's see...............
RALPH442
that's a good idea............why not? every little helps. but how to contact these athletes/organizers? i suppose they must have websites. i'll look for the u.k. and european ones. would you mind if i gave your idea to anyone if i contact them?
Treefrog - thanks so much for posting the youtube link.
Ken