nanoboy
Well-Known Member
Extinction is happening in each and every one of our backyards, nanoboy. An Aussie like you should know that.
~Thylo![]()
Excellent point. In developing countries, we also kill endangered animals if they get in the way of progress. Zoos Victoria is trying to save the lead beaters possum but the government is allowing their forests to be cut down by loggers. In Western Australia, forests are being cut down to make way for housing projects and the white-tailed black cockatoo may go extinct because they have nowhere to nest.
I don't agree with David's last sentence about those that don't care going back to watching TV. For the most part, people care about themselves first and foremost, so if your conservation gets in the way of their livelihood or culture, they would oppose you (the trafficking and use of rhino horns are a good example), unless you can change their culture or give them another source of income.
Being involved in conservation in Africa, you know how difficult it is to convince farmers to save the native wildlife out of pure love for them. Zoos Victoria had to strike a deal with villagers to make beads instead of keeping cattle in an attempt to save the Grevy's zebra: the natives couldn't care less about those particular zebras because as far as they were concerned, there are lots of black and white stripey animals, and their families welfare came first. But once Zoos Victoria showed them that beads meant less work in the hot sun and more money for their families they jumped on board, and saving wildlife was merely a by-product. Had Zoos Victoria and the Kenyan government simply created a reserve and kicked them off the land, they would not have sat back and watched TV. For the masses, ethics and morality and our debt to the planet really has no bearing on conservation. So as you say, for those like us that are passionate, it becomes our duty to convince them or to simply get the job done despite their apathy.