EvilKittie
Well-Known Member
is it just me, or when mammals go extinct it is breaking news or when a frog or a reptile or a bird goes extinct its not realy known of (unless writhed hornbill is in charge of the news ^^)
yeah last month there was a large news report on how much the tiger populations have dropped.
There was another time how a report said that the northern white rhino is most likely extinct in the wild, they then quickly metnioned that is it "ok" because the southern subspecies is doing wonderful.
I might be hounded off Zoochat for saying this. But some taxa might not be worth attempting to save.
Genetic diversity is hugely important. Where possible, any clade at any taxonomic level from localised population to species level should be conserved. However, we are in the middle of the fifth great extinction event in the history of the earth. We need to triage and we need to direct resources where they can be best used.
Is it worth directing millions of dollars at northern white rhinos, when there is a very closely related, relatively secure fellow subspecies? Perhaps not, when you consider that black, indian, sumatran and especially javan rhinos are all critically endangered.
We *can* save all four species of panthera, for instance... but can we really justify the resources required to preserve seven subspecies of lion, six subspecies of tiger, nine subspecies of leopard and somewhere between three and nine subspecies of jaguar? I throw open the floor to zoochatters, but my inclination is to say 'no'.
China's largest freshwater turtle the Rafetus swinhoei only has 2 living specimens known to man. Both are kept in a zoo try to breed. They have produced two clutches in which were very large some 60 or so. Though none hatched. On the third attempt the zoo staff want to ensure the egg lining is very firm, because they feared the last two clutches lacked calcium. There was another female beforehand, though when they tried to mate her with the zoo's male, he killed her.
A person in the documentery stated "even if the species future looks very bleek you should always try every attempt to save them"
I do somewhat agree with that. But what is going to happen if when the turtles hatch, will brother and sister mate?
Genetic diversity is hugely important. Where possible, any clade at any taxonomic level from localised population to species level should be conserved. However, we are in the middle of the fifth great extinction event in the history of the earth. We need to triage and we need to direct resources where they can be best used.