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Something Is Rotten: A skeptical look at The Skeptical Environmentalist
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Vanishing PointOn Bjorn Lomborg and extinction12 Dec 2001
My greatest regret about the Lomborg scam is the extraordinary amount of scientific talent that has to be expended to combat it in the media. We will always have contrarians like Lomborg whose sallies are characterized by willful ignorance, selective quotations, disregard for communication with genuine experts, and destructive campaigning to attract the attention of the media rather than scientists. They are the parasite load on scholars who earn success through the slow process of peer review and approval. The question is: How much load should be tolerated before a response is necessary? Lomborg is evidently over the threshold.
Lomborg's estimate of extinction rates is at odds with the vast majority of respected scholarship on extinction. His estimate, "0.7 percent over the next 50 years" -- or 0.014 percent per year -- is an order of magnitude smaller than the most conservative species extinction rates by authorities in the field. Here is my brief response to the analysis of extinction rates in The Skeptical Environmentalist. Before humans existed, the species extinction rate was (very roughly) one species per million species per year (0.0001 percent). Estimates for current species extinction rates range from 100 to 10,000 times that, but most hover close to 1,000 times prehuman levels (0.1 percent per year), with the rate projected to rise, and very likely sharply. To wit:
The above consideration confirms the likely current extinction rate of 0.1 percent, 1,000 times greater than prehuman levels. That figure is also supported by the following indirect measures:
Now consider that some 35 percent of Earth's land vertebrates and 44 percent of its plant species are limited to 1.4 percent of its land surface, the 25 widely recognized "hotspots," which contain about the land mass of Alaska and Texas put together. Consider, too, that the forests and other habitats in these remaining areas have been reduced to 10 percent of their prehuman levels (see, for example, Norman Myers et al., Nature 403, 2000), and most are at immediate risk of disappearing. Finally, consider that species extinction is increasingly enhanced by pollution, climate change, and the growing flood of invasive species -- hence the foregoing estimates of extinctions based on habitat reduction are, sadly, minimal and modest. |
Special Edition Contents
Something Is Rotten in the State of Denmark A special edition of Grist takes an in-depth look at Bjorn Lomborg's book The Skeptical Environmentalist
Vanishing Point On Bjorn Lomborg and extinction
Hostile Climate On Bjorn Lomborg and climate change
Bjorn Again On Bjorn Lomborg and population
Not Seeing the Forest for the Trees On Bjorn Lomborg and deforestation
Counter Argument On Bjorn Lomborg's use of statistics
Unhealthy Skepticism On Bjorn Lomborg and environmental hazards to human health
More Power to You On Bjorn Lomborg and energy
Let Us Not Praise Infamous Men On Bjorn Lomborg's hidden agenda
The Lomborg and Short of It Links related to The Skeptical Environmentalist
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Something Is Rotten in the State of Denmark. A special edition of Grist takes an in-depth look at Bjorn Lomborg's book The Skeptical Environmentalist.
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