karohemd: by LJ user gothindulgence (Seal)
Ozzy ([personal profile] karohemd) wrote2009-09-22 01:46 pm

"It is time to let the Panda go"

Interesting viewpoint and I think quite valid as "survival of the fittest" applies here and the panda is, quite frankly, too stupidill adapted to survive. It would be entirely different if all it took was to conserve or expand his habitat.

I'd be interested to hear what my naturalist/conservationist friends think about this.

(thanks to [livejournal.com profile] raggedy_man for the link)

[identity profile] professoryaffle.livejournal.com 2009-09-22 02:15 pm (UTC)(link)
but at the same time something kills all the bamboo (human or otherwise) and they are scuppered

They are very very well evolved for a very small niche. Humans aren't the only force which can change niches and start exerting negative selection pressure. Their very slow reproduction rate probably wouldn't help here

There is also the pragmatic view that Pandas might already be past the point of new return and we are really swiming up stream, would we be better spending more money on species which are easier to save or provide greater benefit to other species or humans

[identity profile] undyingking.livejournal.com 2009-09-22 02:30 pm (UTC)(link)
In the long run, of course, everything's scuppered -- no species lasts for ever. But pandas lived quite happily for around eight million years without anything killing all the bamboo, until humans came along.

Sure, eventually all small niches get closed off. But this argument seems to be trying to evade the fact that we hastened the closure of this particular one.

I'm sure that the panda is already past the point of no return, so I accept the pragmatic argument that money might better go elsewhere. But I am disgusted by the attempt (not accusing you of this, but I've seen it made repeatedly) to blame the panda for its own extinction, for somehow being too crap to live -- when the truth is, it had been around a lot longer than humans have, and was under no threat until they turned up and destroyed its habitat.

[identity profile] professoryaffle.livejournal.com 2009-09-22 03:24 pm (UTC)(link)
pandas have been around 8 millon years, really

Most of the online info I can find put fossils at around 600,000ya which makes them about the same age as human as a species

The pragamatic argument does indeed hold more weight but it doesn't mean that the evolutionary argument is wrong.

[identity profile] undyingking.livejournal.com 2009-09-22 03:51 pm (UTC)(link)
600,000ya which makes them about the same age as human as a species

Humans only arrived in China only about 50,000 ya. And farming, which is the activity that destroyed the habitat, much more recently than that.

(The 8 Mya figure is for pandas as a whole rather than modern giant pandas, so I'll withdraw that as not strictly relevant.)

[identity profile] zenmeisterin.livejournal.com 2009-09-22 06:03 pm (UTC)(link)
This. Selection 'pressure' in an environment where you have few to no natural predators is weak, and in the interests of energy conservation the species that doesn't over-breed and wind up running out of food would do well. Until human settlers began causing drastic alterations in their habitat, they were doing just fine. They are a fragile species and they cannot handle the human invasion of their habitats. It's quite likely that they would have come to an end at some point in the future even without human intervention, as 99.9% of all species that ever lived have done, but in this case they've been cut short by humanity as many other species have been.

I think it's quite unfair to single out which species to conserve and which ones not to bother with becasue of how useful they are to us at present, or how cute they look. To say that a species of animal 'deserves' to be wiped out by humanity's actions becasue it wasn't good enough to adapt to our blink-of-an-eye colonisation of the planet is arrogant beyond belief. As a species, we have an attrocious sense of responsibility.
fearmeforiampink: (Panda)

[personal profile] fearmeforiampink 2009-09-22 07:32 pm (UTC)(link)
I think the question that's being raised is more the old NHS one:

Yes, that drug might save you from dying of cancer. But it has only a 10% chance of doing so, and for the same money spent on this other drug, we've got an 80% chance of saving these five other people. Who gets to live?

Swap pandas for the first drug and other more viable but currently at risk species for the second, and I think the situations are rather similar.

[identity profile] feanelwa.livejournal.com 2009-09-22 04:37 pm (UTC)(link)
It is very difficult to kill a couple of square feet of bamboo, never mind a whole forest - it fights back quite hard. I don't think any species without JCBs could do it.