by Ibon » Sun 09 Oct 2011, 00:56:08
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '
')Wilderness, by definition, is land that has NEVER been disturbed and has always been in a natural, pristine state.
There isn't a lot of wilderness left in the world.
This thread is not about the definition of wilderness, but the question of how fast a state of wilderness will return post crash. As Sea Gypsy pointed out this will vary depending on habitat.
Just as there are fragile environments like Easter Island which may never see the original forests before human impact there will be other environments like in the lowland forests of Mexico where Mayan ruins were discovered underneath pristine old growth forest.
The theme here is resilience. And fortunately these designated wilderness areas around the planet represent the sinks from which
wilderness will return to areas of human impact.
Tropical areas have greater bio diversity and in these very areas the protected areas are smaller and under greater pressure than what you find in Canada or Alaska. In fact at one time in North AMerica east of the Mississippi there was less than 1% of forests remaining. There were very few extinctions considering this vast area; Passenger pigeons, Carolina Parakeets, Ivory billed Woodpeckers, American Chestnut etc.
IF you look at Canada north of Highway 1 there is vast wilderness areas but species diversity is low. In a square mile of boreal forest you may only have a dozen tree species vs the same area in the Amazon yielding 200.
There are many tropical ecologists who have worked decades in the field who would argue that if a crash in inevitable better sooner than later so that the integrity of these remaining sinks remains intact.
Tropical lowland forests of Southeast Asia are the most endangered in having the smallest protected areas and most under threat. Equatorial Africa once the Chinese invest their billions may soon follow. The neotropics are in better shape with significant sinks of preserved habitats in biodiversity hotspots throughout the tropical Americas.
The next couple of decades will be critical as the rate of extinctions will surely rise.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
blog: http://blog.mounttotumas.com/
website: http://www.mounttotumas.com