Restocking North America's Large Animals: Crazy Ecologists' Plan

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A proposal to reintroduce large mammals like elephants, lions, and camels to North America aims to recreate ecosystems as they existed over 13,000 years ago, prior to significant human impact. Co-authored by ecologists and conservation biologists, the plan seeks to enrich a landscape that has been largely devoid of large mammals since the end of the Pleistocene, a period marked by the extinction of many species due to human hunting and climate change. Critics of the proposal express skepticism, questioning the practicality and necessity of such an initiative, arguing that the current ecosystem is functioning well without these species. Concerns are raised about the implications of reintroducing large carnivores and the potential risks to human safety. The discussion reflects a divide between conservation goals and public apprehension regarding the rewilding of North America.
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l To Restock North America's Large Animals
Elephants, lions, cheetahs and camels could one day roam the western US under a proposal to recreate North American landscapes as they existed more than 13,000 years ago, when humans first encountered them.

The plan, proposed in a commentary in Nature and co-authored by 13 ecologists and conservation biologists, would help enrich a North American ecosystem that was left almost devoid of large mammals at the end of the Pleistocene period. It would also help preserve wildlife that faces the threat of extinction in Africa and Asia.

Between 50,000 and 10,000 years ago, 97 of 150 genera of large mammals disappeared from around the world. Although a warming climate played its part, the consensus is that over-hunting by humans probably had a significant role.

In North America, by about 13,000 years ago, humans were leaving evidence of big-game hunting using sophisticated stone tools. This hunting probably helped to drive many animals to extinction, including North American mammoths and mastodons, lions, cheetahs, camelops (a relative of the modern camel), horses and asses...continued
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7862
What are they thinking?! Is this really as idiotic an idea at is sounds to me?
 
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TheStatutoryApe said:
What are they thinking?! Is this really as idiotic an idea at is sounds to me?

This hunting probably helped to drive many animals to extinction, including North American mammoths...and asses.

There are still plenty of asses around.
 
My high school must have been a habitat for asses
 
Yeah, these animals went exstinct and guess what? We're just fine without them. Until an alien probe comes and starts destroying Earth because it can't find any camels to talk too, America stays as it is now.
 
Entropy said:
Yeah, these animals went exstinct and guess what? We're just fine without them. Until an alien probe comes and starts destroying Earth because it can't find any camels to talk too, America stays as it is now.

Thats like saying let's kill all the stupid people because the world wouldn't be worse off. I agree.
 
TheStatutoryApe said:
What are they thinking?! Is this really as idiotic an idea at is sounds to me?
Apparently they aren't content with natural selection. :bugeye:
 
Camels, fine. But keep the large carnivores far away from me and my tasty flesh. :rolleyes:
 
I remember going to the Page Museum a few years back and being amazed that there actually used to be things like giant camels, mammoths, and sabertooth cats, in the Los Angeles basin at the same time as humans, especially considering that it wasn't really all that long ago. Still, I don't think there would be much room for them at this point.
 
Ecologist are normallyl considerd allays of the communist party, but these guys are just plane nuts .
 
  • #10
Moonbear said:
Apparently they aren't content with natural selection. :bugeye:

Fundamentalist Christian ecologists :wink:
 

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