Addressing Climate Change Will Not “Save the Planet”
!tags:: #lit✍/📰️article/highlights
!links::
!ref:: Addressing Climate Change Will Not “Save the Planet”
!author:: theintercept.com
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Reference
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Notes
When it comes to effects on wildlife, climate change is more like a mule, slow and plodding. Yes, a warmed atmosphere is projected to be a significant factor in the extinction crisis in future decades, but what’s destroying species today is habitat fragmentation and loss, overhunting and overexploitation, agricultural expansion, pollution, and industrial development. It isn’t climate change that caused a 69 percent loss in total wildlife populations between 1970 and 2018, according to a World Wildlife Fund study published this year. The cause is too many people demanding too much from ecosystems, or human overshoot of the biophysical carrying capacity of the Earth.
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dg-publish: true
created: 2024-07-01
modified: 2024-07-01
title: Addressing Climate Change Will Not “Save the Planet”
source: hypothesis
!tags:: #lit✍/📰️article/highlights
!links::
!ref:: Addressing Climate Change Will Not “Save the Planet”
!author:: theintercept.com
=this.file.name
Reference
=this.ref
Notes
When it comes to effects on wildlife, climate change is more like a mule, slow and plodding. Yes, a warmed atmosphere is projected to be a significant factor in the extinction crisis in future decades, but what’s destroying species today is habitat fragmentation and loss, overhunting and overexploitation, agricultural expansion, pollution, and industrial development. It isn’t climate change that caused a 69 percent loss in total wildlife populations between 1970 and 2018, according to a World Wildlife Fund study published this year. The cause is too many people demanding too much from ecosystems, or human overshoot of the biophysical carrying capacity of the Earth.
- No location available
-