this post was submitted on 02 Jul 2025
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DACH - Deutschsprachige Community für Deutschland, Österreich, Schweiz

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[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Unpopuläre Meinung:

Wir werden das sechste Massenaussterben verursachen. Ein kleiner Teil der Lebewesen wird überleben und die Erde neu bevölkern. Die Menschen werden wohl nicht darunter sein und das ist wahrscheinlich gut so.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 7 hours ago

Nur mal als Beispiel, die allermeisten Tiere einschließlich der Insekten vertragen keine höheren Temperaturen als der Mensch - der wiederum in vielen Regionen zunehmend auf Klimatisierung angewiesen sein wird, allein um zu überleben.

Da heutige Pflanzen auf Insekten angewiesen sind, ist das auch für Pflanzen Kacke. Auch die, die wir essen.

Und in einem durch gelöstes CO2, vulgo Kohlensäure, sauren und sauerstoffarmen Ozean werden kaum noch Fische leben, sondern Quallen und andere Dinge.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Wir werden das sechste Massenaussterben verursachen.

Das ist schon längst in Gange und der Mensch ist die Ursache.

We are in the sixth mass extinction event. Unlike the previous five, this one is caused by the overgrowth of a single species, Homo sapiens. Although the episode is often viewed as an unusually fast (in evolutionary time) loss of species, it is much more threatening, because beyond that loss, it is causing rapid mutilation of the tree of life, where entire branches (collections of species, genera, families, and so on) and the functions they perform are being lost. It is changing the trajectory of evolution globally and destroying the conditions that make human life possible. It is an irreversible threat to the persistence of civilization and the livability of future environments for H. sapiens. Instant corrective actions are required.

Mass extinctions during the past 500 million y rapidly removed branches from the phylogenetic tree of life and required millions of years for evolution to generate functional replacements for the extinct (EX) organisms. Here we show, by examining 5,400 vertebrate genera (excluding fishes) comprising 34,600 species, that 73 genera became EX since 1500 AD. Beyond any doubt, the human-driven sixth mass extinction is more severe than previously assessed and is rapidly accelerating. The current generic extinction rates are 35 times higher than expected background rates prevailing in the last million years under the absence of human impacts. The genera lost in the last five centuries would have taken some 18,000 y to vanish in the absence of human beings. Current generic extinction rates will likely greatly accelerate in the next few decades due to drivers accompanying the growth and consumption of the human enterprise such as habitat destruction, illegal trade, and climate disruption. If all now-endangered genera were to vanish by 2,100, extinction rates would be 354 (average) or 511 (for mammals) times higher than background rates, meaning that genera lost in three centuries would have taken 106,000 and 153,000 y to become EX in the absence of humans. Such mutilation of the tree of life and the resulting loss of ecosystem services provided by biodiversity to humanity is a serious threat to the stability of civilization. Immediate political, economic, and social efforts of an unprecedented scale are essential if we are to prevent these extinctions and their societal impacts.

[...]

During past mass extinctions there was no species with the power or interest to stop extinctions, and no conscious stake in maintaining biodiversity. Today there is a species that should know it is not able to wait millions of years for its life-support systems to be restored after a mass extinction. Ironically, the scale that species’ activities is the sole cause of today’s biological holocaust. What is crystal clear is that the trajectory of the dimming future of civilization will be directed in part not just by the overall loss of biodiversity but by the pattern of our mutilation of the tree of life. The scientific community understands this existential problem, so it is time generate public understanding into policy action while there is still a rapidly disappearing window of opportunity to act. What happens in the next two decades will very likely define the future of biodiversity and H. sapiens.

[...]

Mutilation of the tree of life via mass extinction of animal genera | PNAS

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 days ago

Witzig, dass du von der Zukunft sprichst, wir sind bereits mittendrin. Ich befürchte aber, dass Menschen zu den überlebenden zählen werden, wir sind sehr anpassungsfähig und zäh, werden aber erstmal deutlich weniger sein