Crosscheck wrote:
PatGreen wrote:
*Brilliant well informed post citing how useless a captive tiger population is*
Crosscheck wrote:
The WWF should be going after Asian money since they're the ones eating the things.
As a matter of fact, get the UN involved and sanction those bastards.
It seems like the US is doing more than its part to help seeing as they're not even native to this continent.
Am I coming off as campaigning against tigers?
i was responding to your comment about them being in no danger of extinction.
the US is consistently asked to do more than it's fair share in every aspect of the world, but as the most advanced country in conservation biology (Cornell, the big 10 schools, oregon, texas a+m... the list goes on) and the country with the most money that people are willing to separate with, it's only to be expected.
the animals that elicit emotional response from the general public (charismatic megafauna, typically) are (big), furry, and identifiable, either by fur color and patterns or geographic area. these animals typically gain respect and admiration from afar due to zoos and thus the WWF reaches out to the US, because there are stakeholders in the US.
this is a response to other things i read:
yes, some animals do die off naturally, and extinction is a cycle of life. however there are many species of endangered plants and animals that have had their timeline severely shortened or altered by anthropogenic activity. typically, this is overhunting and habitat destruction, like line cuts and perforation pockets.
i'm not sure that many insects are going extinct every day, and the difference between that and these megafauna is that there are thousands of insects and arachnids and not all of them are categorized. also, no organisms in the class
insecta can be listed on the endangered species act, and i believe CITES does not acknowledge insects either. insects also, as a "k" species, have less an issue of extinction because of the massive amounts of alleles provides in the massive birthings. they are engineered by nature to be food for the rest of the food chain, so many species (like mayflys, see the hendrickson hatch) hatch, breed, and die. they perform no long term or complicated services to ecosystems.
i know for a fact people get very upset in NY when the frosted elfin butterflys are in trouble (eastern part of state) due to poor blue lupin habitat. there is huge protection for wetlands, mostly because of plants and the services provided by those ecosystems.
and i want to point out that i think zoos are pretty awesome when regarding the way the animals are treated.