Yesterday I wrote about how conservation biologists are debating the value of moving species to protect them from climate-change-driven extinction. As a follow-up (or an antidote), check out "Blood for no oil: Our obsession with climate change is killing off animals left and right." in Slate. Brendan Borrell, biologist turned journalist, argues that climate change poses a genuine threat to biodiversity, but "it does not come close to the immediate, irreparable damage caused by the destruction of habitat." Good old chainsaws are still the big danger, he argues, because two-thirds of the world's biodiversity is in the tropics, where deforestation is happening fast and the effects of climate change may not be as dramatic as they'll be closer to the poles. I wrote about similar skepticism in 2007 in an article for Science. Some critics point out that we have yet to discover some of the important factors in how ...
Choose Your Top Poison
Explore how climate change biodiversity threats intertwine with habitat destruction, potentially risking more species extinction.
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