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An
Ecological
Paradox
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An Ecological Paradox
The Presidential Address of Dr. Theodore M. Sperry to the Kansas Academy of Science.
Sperry, Theodore M. 1960. An ecological paradox. Transactions of the
Kansas Academy of Science. 63(4):215-227.
The text reprinted below is used with permission of the
Kansas Academy of Science. The subsections are not original, but were added for
clarity in this web version. |
I had an Ecological Idea.
I don't know where it came from, but I imagine it
had been present in outer space for millennia and had first entered the earth's
magnetic field sometime after the development of higher life on the earth's
surface.
Its orbit first crossed my awareness, as I
recall, many years ago while I was wading the waters of Bacon's Swamp at
Indianapolis, even before the time ecologist Stanley Cain was describing this
area in his earliest papers. But it wasn't trapped during this transit and
presumably went into an elliptical orbit around the sun.
During its irregular recurrence in succeeding
years, I had fleeting glimpses of it while at the University of Illinois, but in
graduate school individual ideas are as difficult to keep track of as flies
around a manure pile. The very richness of such a medium makes it difficult for
individual ideas to develop well (except a few saprobiotic forms) and, as with
its biological counterpart, the graduate training must subsequently be spread
thinly over a considerable area in order to produce its most effective yields.
The flowering and fruiting of ideas often occur after the academic infusion has
decomposed and is no longer recognizable.
By the time I had become influenced by Aldo
Leopold at the University of Wisconsin, I was enabled to grasp the Idea as it
whizzed by on one of its transits and retain it within my own sphere long enough
to examine it.
Its general description is that of a wild area,
within the encompassment of a western civilization. I was engaged at the time in
the development of the University of Wisconsin Arboretum, located on the edge of
the city of Madison within easy view of the State Capitol building. Here, where
the corn stalks of earlier crops were still present, was restored a wild area of
hardwood and evergreen forests, prairie, and marshland, around the shores of
Lake Wingra. Within this area were deer, fox, mink, swans, orchids of several
kinds, and hundreds of other species in uncounted variety, both common and rare,
all living under natural, wild conditions. The past had not yet disappeared even
with the present very much with us.
The buzzing of an Idea
Unlike our more conventional satellitic hardware
in the atmosphere, ideas seldom create much friction in passing through the
relatively empty reaches of the mind, but occasionally they get hot if trapped
within the cerebrum, where they buzz around like a, fly in a bottle.
One such buzzing of this Idea produced a feverish
development on a small lot in Decatur, Illinois, where numerous wild species
were restored for a few years, with considerable success in spite of some errors
of management which were introduced. Like the fly, the Idea subsequently escaped
and cooled off during a few more solar orbits.
It again became trapped in December, 1949, when
approaching Pittsburg, Kansas, from the south, becoming deflected by the
attraction of a lot just over one acre in size, in the southwestern part of the
city – a lot which is herewith identified by the name Paradocs.
This area, was formerly underlain at the depth of
a few feet by the Pittsburg-Weir vein of coal. This coal was removed around the
turn of the century by team and scoop, and the area left rough, with a shallow
open pit in its eastern half. Building lots were sold all around it, but it
remained for a pair of biologists in1954 finally to build a residence on this
acre, one of the last remaining undeveloped lots in the vicinity.
The Idea determined that the lot, for the most
part, should remain "undeveloped", with the residence confined to the
southwestern corner. This is the highest part of the acre, and there is a
definite, although not steep, slope to the northeast. During the fifty-odd years
following the removal of the coal, the lot was relatively undisturbed, allowing
a number of cottonwoods, elms, wild cherries, and silver maples to reach
maturity, and various other woody species to become introduced. Repeated burning
had left its effects upon the vegetation, and an overnight cabin had been built
at the eastern edge of the lot, with a drive from the street leading to it.
The wild areas suggested by the Idea consist of a
border of forest along the northern edge of the lot, with a central area of
prairie between the forest and the residence. The shallow pit in the eastern
part remains as a pond. Shrubby borders bound the area on the east, south, and
west, and a small mown lawn surrounds the house. Small rocky ledges interrupt
some of the slopes of the lawn. Paths and trails provide access to the various
areas of Paradocs, as well as serving as emergency fire breaks. These are used
extensively by various species of mammals and birds, as well as providing the
small openings needed as ecological niches in any general habitat.
Maintenance of the area is kept to a minimum. Not
only did this Idea not like lots of work, but it was more a matter of a
principle which insists that wild areas are the result of the actions of the
environment, the reactions of the organisms to that environment, and the normal
interactions of these organisms with each other. Mowing maintains the lawns and
trails, and trimming is necessary along the paths and wooded edges.
Watering is limited to recently transplanted
introductions, and to the retention of a small drinking pool for the fauna
during periods of drought. Burning of the prairie area, in early spring every
two or three years was introduced as a result of various observations,
especially the studies by Albertson and his colleagues. Dead trees are not cut,
nor are dead leaves or down timber removed except from the lawn areas. In this
way, many additional ecological niches are added for fungi, insects and insect
predators, hole nesters, etc.
The absence of the large native mammals (bison,
deer, badger, coyote, etc.) prevents the development of a completely balanced
biocoenose, but this can be compensated in part by the disturbing influence of Homo
sapiens. The Idea insists that it is less important as to how a disturbance
is introduced than that some disturbance is repeatedly introduced. Thus Baptisia or Silphium become established in a prairie soil equally well whether the
sod has been broken by the pawing of a bison, the burrowing of a badger, or
digging by man. It might require fifty years, or a century, for a. combination
of squirrel, raccoon, and Indian to bring a pecan to a particular acre of
ground, or an ecologist can do it in one season, but time is of no importance to
either pecans or ideas, as long as the establishment is at some time
accomplished.
Uniformity and variation
A uniformity of environment yields a uniformity
of biota. This is extremely difficult to maintain. The greater the diversity of
the environment, the richer the biotic yield from it. No richness of harvest or
soil ever resulted from a uniformity of treatment. Witness the decreasing
yields consistently obtained from the uniformly cropped agricultural plots of
the Rothamstead Agricultural Station at Horpenden, in England, or the Morrow
Plots on the University of Illinois campus. This is an important genetic allele
of the Idea, that continual and varied changes be introduced by the ecologist
wherever the limited size of the area prevents normal biotic reactions
(especially of the larger mammals) within the area.
One variant which has been recently introduced is
the development of a small sand prairie within the restored grassland. In spite
of its small size of only fifteen or twenty feet, with a depth of one to two
feet, it should still be sufficient to provide an ecological niche for the cacti Opuntia and Mamillaria, for Oenothera missouriensis,
for a lizard or two, such as Crotaphytus collaris, and for numerous
insects and smaller biotic species.
A contrasting variant also recently introduced
has been an equally small depression of wet prairie for Spartina and some
sedges, perhaps with some attendant temporary fauna during migration, since
resident species generally prefer substantially larger areas.
The pond is mostly shaded by some of the old
trees of Paradocs, but the northern and western edges are being kept as open as
possible for some shorebirds and heliophilic plants. Time has not yet cooperated
with the Idea to introduce a greater variety of borders for the pond. These
borders at present are rather uniformly steep, but some gentler slopes will
result from a recontouring job of the now nearly level bottom.
Additional ecological niches are added in the
form of stone and brush piles in the wooded areas and elsewhere. An earth mound
is located in the southwest corner. A plum thicket, already present in the area,
is being retained between the prairie area and the pond, while a small juniper
spinney is developing at the northwestern edge of the prairie area. Landscaping
effects are considered in the establishment of the various ecological areas and
niches, and each view from the residence presents a different vegetational
aspect.
"Listen," said the Idea, "just
what do you consider as native species on this Paradocs of yours? I have a
distinct recollection that that acre was solid prairie before the coal miners
came in to demolish a biocoenose which required thousands of years to
establish."
"Agreed," replied the ecologist,
"but even their worst efforts didn't entirely destroy all of that
vegetation. Look! Here are a number of prairie species still remaining on the
area: big and little bluestem, the sunflower Helianthus mollis, several
goldenrods and asters, Baptisia leucantha, Viola sagittata, and
even a number of plants of the orchid Spiranthes cernua. We are, however,
working on an old mine spoil bank, and must consider what might be called native
to such a spoil bank, rather than native to an undisturbed prairie. As we said a
few minutes ago, this disturbance should produce a much greater variety than
would occur on the original prairie itself, and an examination of the spoil
banks here in the Pittsburg area seems to confirm this. Note, for example, the
many beavers and occasional deer which now occur here. Would you have found them
on our original prairies?"
"Well! They could have wandered through from
time to time, even if they hadn't remained long," answered the Idea,
"That's the point," said the ecologist.
"Even occasional or rare species may still be considered native to an area
if they come in by natural causes. Let's count as native species any which occur
within the vicinity, or which might migrate by natural means into such a
disturbed any time within a century or so. Known introductions which have become
naturalized must also be included in our lists. And let's not get stiff-necked
about the horticultural lilac and spiraea, and narcissus left here by the
previous owner. They are no more out of place than the residential structure
itself. We shall confine such horticultural species to the lawn around the house
or to the south border, where they should have little effect on the rest of the
area."
Lists of plants
The Idea has been buzzing around Paradocs for a
decade now, apparently departing frequently on a series of 92-minute global
orbits during lectures, exams, seminars, paper grading, innumerable committee
meetings, organizational presidencies, N.S.F. conferences, and kindred
interruptions. But what has it accomplished during its buzzing? Perhaps a series
of lists would give some enlightenment.
The Idea lapsed momentarily into one of its
reveries. It recalled the war between the Oak trees and the Squirrels.
It seems that one day the head of the tribe of Sciurus was feeling proud and a bit conceited at having elevated himself and
his offspring above the other rodents by dint of the hard work of climbing a
tree (and as a result of having forgotten to trim his toenails). He lay
sprawled out in the sun on the horizontal limb of a large Oak tree, with his
legs dangling on either side of the branch and his chin testing on a small
knot.
"The nerve of some people!" thought
the Oak tree, "making me work holding his lazy weight out there when it's
job enough just to support this family of ripening acorns these autumnal
months. Here's a big acorn that is already ripe. Watch me fix that
Squirrel." Whereupon the Oak Tree, with unerring ,aim, plopped the acorn
squarely on top of the Squirrel's head.
"About those lists," interrupted the
ecologist, bringing the, Idea back with a start.
First, let us look at the arboreal plants now
established on Paradocs – some 35 species. Of these, 10 may be listed as
horticultural. Of the native or naturalized species, 5 have been deliberate
introductions, while the remaining 20 have come in under their own powers. Elm,
silver maple, and pin oak are dominant, with black cherry a sub-dominant. These
and the subsequent: figures, by the way, are not necessarily complete as of the
time of writing, and are usually in need of revision.
The shrubs and vines comprise another 30 species.
these, 6 are horticultural, 10 are deliberately introduced native or naturalized
species, and 14 are naturally seeded species. Unfortunately, the European
honeysuckle is dominant along with the native coralberry and blackberries. Wild
grape is a, sub-dominant.
Some 50 forest forbs and grasses have thus far
been identified, of which 30 have been brought in by the ecologist and 20 are
self-seeded. Among these, the blue violets and dayflower are conspicuous. A
number of transplanted vernal natives are now becoming quite at home since the
arboreal species are now tall enough to give some open air beneath their leafy
canopy.
The Idea had wandered back to the story of the
Squirrel.
"Well! Of all the mean tricks! I'll get
even with that acorn," barked the Squirrel, not recognizing that it was
the Oak tree which had been offended. Whereupon the Squirrel retrieved the
acorn from the ground, carried it to a convenient limb, and promptly proceeded
to devour it.
"He can't get away with an insult like
that," snapped the Oak tree, and promptly popped him with another acorn.
The Squirrel ate that one, too.
The Oak tree dropped two more acorns and
missed, then scored a bull's-eye with twin acorns at the same time.
"The lists!" persisted the ecologist,
seeing that the Idea had wandered again.
Unfortunately, from the point of view of the
ecologist, the prairie, as the original biome of the area, was somewhat
short-changed on space, but there seemed to be no choice without sacrificing
some of the mature trees on the area, and this it seemed prudent not to do. In
spite of its crowded quarters, the prairie has been quite successful, as
indicated by its floristic list. The sand prairie and the wet prairie areas have
been too recently developed to add their share to this list, and that part
already established still shows some conspicuous floristic gaps.
Among the graminoids, the big blue-stem and
Indian grass are dominant, with the broom sedge (Andropogon virginicus),
a. relict of the former annual burning, a sub-dominant. Tridens and Setaria might also be included among the sub-dominants. Of this list of 20 grasses and
sedges, 7 are intentional transplants to the prairie, and the remainder
naturally seeded.
Of the 60 prairie forbs, 25 have been brought in
by the ecologist. Helianthus mollis, and the Solidagos and Asters,
constitute the dominants in this list.
Statistics bored the Idea. The Squirrel story
was more interesting.
"Cheou!" chattered the Squirrel.
"Two acorns on the inside are making me feel as uncomfortable as the
lumps on my head on the outside. I need some help to combat these pests."
So he called together the members of his tribe
and announced that as a result of an unprovoked attack, a state of war existed
between the Squirrels and the Acorns. The offended Oak tree said nothing,
pleased that the jumpy Squirrels didn't even realize who it was that they were
actually trying to conquer. The Squirrels also didn't realize how much
acornition the Oak tree had in reserve, and it wasn't long before every
Squirrel in the tribe was fed up with the war. A truce was called for the
night.
The ecologist, however, was concerning himself
with aquatic plants.
Of the plants around the pond, the sub-aquatic
willow and sycamore and buttonbush have already been listed among the woody
plants. The list of 20 grasses and forbs which have been identified to date is
an entirely naturally-seeded group. Development of this group awaits the recontouring job mentioned earlier.
With the exception of the fern Cystopteris
fragilis which has been introduced into the wooded area, the cryptogams have
had to shift for themselves. No naturally occurring Pteridophytes have been
found on the area. There are more than half a dozen species of mosses, several
of them growing luxuriously and abundantly, but none of them has yet been
determined. No liverworts have been noted.
The next morning, the Idea recollected, a smart
young Squirrel had a plan. "If we go out to the ends of the branches and
bite off those acorns, it will be impossible for them to attack us.
Furthermore, instead of trying to destroy them all at once, we can carry them
off and bury them now, then take care of them at our leisure during the
winter.
Incidentally, their protein production is
prodigious and their tempting taste is terrific if one doesn't stuff the stomach
to satiety.
Lists of fungi
The ecologist was now down to the Thallophytes.
A mycologist could have a field day, or many of
them, on Paradocs. The bracketed cellulose digesters abound on the dead and down
timber. There are a variety of gilled mushrooms and puffballs among the more
conspicuous forms, as well as the fascinating phalloids and many smaller forms.
There are a number of rusts and smuts among the parasites as well as the
interminable leaf spots and many others equally difficult.
Among the ascos is the always recognizable Morchella
esculenta. Some alcohol-producing yeasts were discovered in some bee-stung
grapes. Penicillium and Aspergillus occur in the kitchen from time
to time, and doubtless occur outdoors as well. There are powdery mildews and
wilts and black rots and brown rots and leaf curls and blights to make one's
head swim. With fare exceptions, even bacteriologists can tell one almost
nothing about the "wild" bacteria, even when they are sufficiently
abundant to photograph without a microscope (on the surface of the pond). And
let's not forget the capillitia of the slime molds among the mycological
observations.
The algae are less numerous, and the Paradocs
species even less known. Protococcus abounds on the sandstone rock ledges
and on the bark of the various trees, less frequently elsewhere. Lyngbia has been identified from the pond, and a number of other greens and diatoms are
known to occur.
Several lichens, especially the corticolous
forms, are common, but there are also some soil forms which compete with the
mosses for space. Anybody want to name them?
The Idea mused.
Not only was this plan adopted, but the
Squirrels called in the deer, bear, raccoon and other mast feeders, including
the woodpeckers, jays, and grackles, for help. Acorns broken by the hoofed
mammals were also used as food by rabbits, mice, rats, and many of the smaller
winter birds, such as the bobwhites, cardinals, titmice, chickadees, juncos,
etc. But the Oak tree sighed contentedly in the wind, covered the buried
acorns with a layer of weather-resistant leaves, and planned its buds with an
even larger acorn crop for the following year.
The ecologist continued with scientific persistence.
Lists of invertebrates
For the most part, the Invertebrates of Paradocs
are even less known than the Cryptogams. Protozoa have been noted in the pond,
and they also doubtless occur elsewhere, but thus far their identification has
not been attempted. The same is true for the roundworms. Perhaps other helminths
also occur, but none has yet been noted. (They haven't even been looked for.)
One or more species of the Lumbricidae among the annelids are present, and these
seem to be slowly increasing in numbers. The only mollusks yet noted include a
snail of the genus Planorbis, and one or two species of small slugs. All
of these are moderately common in some seasons.
Even the most tantalizing menu eventually
becomes monotonous, thought the Idea, and by the time the elm buds began to
swell late in February, the Squirrels neglected their war with the acorns in
favor of this new taste sensation. Elm flowers and fruits quickly followed.
The militant leaders among the Squirrels, following the advice of their War
Office for Research and Scientific Techniques (WORST), tried to renew the
attack in April by advising a diet of Oak tree catkins, but this plan fell
flat. The Oak tree production plants were too large and efficient, and the
acorn-producing pistil manufacturers were too small and well hidden for the
spring-fevered Squirrels.
The ecologist was now considering the arthropods.
One species of crayfish is fairly common over the
area, and some of the tiny crustacea have remained in the pond still
unidentified. Spiders of a dozen or more genera abound over the area, just
waiting for some¡one to pull a book off the shelf and get busy on them. A few
ticks have been found, and the larval Trombicula (the well-known
"chigger", and sometimes a little too common) is a representative of
the mites. No scorpions have yet been added to the list.
A limited amount of work has been done by a
graduate student on the insects, and a list of some 40 species represents a
rudimentary start. As Professor Lutz has aptly said, there are "a lot of insects," – perhaps some of them never yet named. The association of
certain insects with their particular preferred host plants is sometimes quite
noticeable.
The Idea knew well that in May, the secret
timing mechanism hidden in the acorns, and subsequently described to the press
as the Delayed Nutritional Action (DNA), was released, and the now forgotten
food stores hidden by the Squirrels themselves quietly developed new
acorn-producing plants in locations at far greater distances than the Oak
tree, even at its stormiest, could have accomplished. Their true nature was
not even suspected by the Squirrels for several years, by which time they were
too well established to be displaced.
Lists of vertebrates
The vertebrate record, continued the ecologist,
is much more satisfactory. There are no fish in the pond, which dries up during
our drought seasons. Its catchment basin is much too small, scarcely more than
an acre, and the soil is somewhat more porous than some of our old spoil bank
soils.
Although Paradocs is more than half a mile east
of Cow Creek, and there are no permanent ponds in the vicinity closer than this
almost intermittent stream, seven species of anurans and one salamander have all
come in on their own legs, crossing at least two streets and several lawns to
reach this pond. The anuran calls fill the night air during the spring mating
season, as each one seems to attempt to prove its dominance.
Fortunately, the reptiles are silent, and we,
too, remain silent about them, so far as the neighbors and visitors are
concerned. There are four species of turtles, six snakes, and two lizards on
this list, but most of these seem to be transients. Two snakes, one lizard, and
the box turtles may be listed as permanent residents. The Scaled Lizard has been
the only introduced species, and it did not persist.
And so the feud continues, observed the Idea,
with the Squirrels getting fat each year while they try to prevent the shower
of acorns, and the Oak trees continually expanding into new territories with
the able assistance of these Squirrels.
The enthusiasm of the ecologist had now reached its peak.
None of the 163 species of birds may be said to
be permanent residents of this restricted acre, although certainly a number of
them are residents of this vicinity. There are perhaps fifteen on the list which
have only been sighted as they flew over the area, such as the geese, for
example, but the remainder have paid personal visits to the lot, including such
wild forms as a Mallard on the pond and the Pileated Woodpecker insect-hunting
on the dead trees. A Lark Sparrow, brought in by a student, is the only
introduced species on the list, and of course it didn't stay long. The banding
program has yielded 87 species from this list in the traps or nets.
Not counting cats, dogs, or men, some 18 species
of mammals have occurred natively on Paradocs. The Cottontails and Fox Squirrels
are the dominant permanent residents above ground and the Mole below ground. The
Opossum, Deer Mouse, Cotton Rat, and Big Brown Bat, are also usually in
residence, while the remainder are less frequent, although some, like the
Woodchuck, may remain a year or two at a time.
"Wait!" said the Idea. "I've
just thought of a moral. Symbiosis makes simple sense to the
sophisticated."
"Whatever called forth that remark?"
exclaimed the ecologist. "And yet," he continued without waiting for
a reply, "you are right. In fact, I was about to make a similar
suggestion myself, but in a more detailed manner, of course."
Climate and change
In examining these lists, we have noted the large
number of species naturally-occurring on the area. Many of these have come in
within the decade that the Idea has been operative on Paradocs, and as a direct
result of the ecological management producing the various habitats. From what we
know of the distribution of biotic species generally, there can be no doubt that
most of the native species which have recently been reintroduced would also have
come in by natural means if they had been given enough time. The principal
influence of the ecologist has been to speed up the process sharply, and to
ensure the appropriate kind of disturbance to keep the varied habitats available
for the incoming disseminules as they arrive, instead of waiting for the slow
processes of flood and drought, fire and epidemic disease, insect depredations
and grazing mammals and native Indian to produce, eventually, similarly
favorable areas over the years.
Such changes, commented the Idea, make fossils of
some species and relicts of others, while at the same time providing new
ecological niches available for occupancy by chance generic mutants.
Yes, agreed the ecologist, but of more immediate
concern is that such variations keep each of the various species in check. Let
any one get out of bounds as a population explosion and it soon kills itself
off. Usually not to the point of extermination, of course, but to such a low
level that it may take. it many years to recover. In such cases, those species
previously held in check by the exploding species then have a chance to move in
while they repair the damage caused by the explosion,.
Normal climatic variations, thanks to sunspot
cycles among other causes, are ordinarily effective in keeping most species
within reasonable limits, although within recent years these have not been very
effective with Homo sapiens. Flood and famine kept this species under control
for many thousands of years until he learned to use his brain, but recently not
even his diabolically clever devices for warfare have been effective in
controlling his numbers. He is even talking now about ways to limit the weather
extremes, to keep these controls, weak as they now are in his case, from being
effective. What does the guy want, anyway?
The gene-pool and an urban acre
Something definitive will have to be done, and
soon, stated the Idea. But just now, our job is to keep a gene-pool in reserve
to repair the wastage now being produced by man. No damage is so great that it
cannot eventually be repaired by the proper combination of genes, selected from
among the two million organisms we presently have available. No one species,
least of all man with his photosynthetic and socio-psychological limitations,
can accomplish much repair by itself. It requires the coordinated action of a
rather large number of species, each producing its own particular effect, to
obtain the high level of biological productivity – "richness", we
like to say – which we idealize as the basis of a good life. The oak needs the
ant and the earthworm to loosen the soil. The rabbit needs the coyote to prevent
a population explosion, and the bluestem needs the bison for the same reason.
Bees and orchids, rails and ostracods, diatoms and nematodes and termites and
prairie anemones. What else can do what the combined action of these can do?
When large areas of the earth's surface are
cleared by the plow and the saw and the bulldozer, how can the richness be
restored if there are not gene-pools held in reserve, like an insurance policy
in a time of need?
In the days of forests and savannas and deserts,
there was no need for gene-pools. There were gene-oceans, then. In these days of
fields and cities and defense developments, the wild areas are numbered and
measured. There are National Forests, National Parks, and National Wildlife
Refuges, generally in thin soil or marshy areas unsuitable for economic
development. These are rich gene-pools, as far as they go. But even these need
to be assured by the establishment of a National Wilderness System as outlined
by the bill now under consideration by Congress, in view of the increasingly
heavy human usage of our present natural areas. Such natural areas are already
rare in grassland soils and along our seashores. Congressional bills introduced
to provide such areas have not yet attracted sufficient backing to permit their
enactment.
Mountain Lion, Timber Wolf, Bison, and Wolverine
ate, by their nature, largely restricted to these large natural reserves. So are
such wild species as the Whooping Crane, California Condor, and Bighorn. But
what about the smaller species, especially the small migrants, or those which
wander with the variations in climate? Their survival rests upon their ability
to move from one favorable habitat to the next. How close together must these
habitat's be? No one knows for most of our species. Favorable habitats one
hundred miles from the normal range are often found occupied by a species. This
distance may be much too great, however, for some species to cross – moles,
for example.
Is it not an Ecological Idea to establish a
series of small gene-pools across the land to protect our diminishing genetic
reserves? Who is in a position to say that this gene, or that, is not worth
jealously guarding? Would you have recognized the value of the genes of Penicillium,
or Neurospora, or Drosophila, which made possible the research
leading to the Nobel prize awards?
Let the governments protect our few scattered
large reserves. Let citizen organizations, like the Audubon Society or the
Nature Conservancy, supplement these with smaller choice sites between the large
reserves. But to bond these together, we need the individual enlightened citizen
to establish the many little gene-pools within the length of the stride of the
Mourning Cloak and Partridge Pea, and Spirogyra. The farm pond and
Conservation Reserve specialists can do this in our agricultural areas. But so
can the more numerous dwellers in our spreading Suburbia.
It is an Ecological Paradox how many genes one
can keep, with appropriate management, on an urban acre.
– Kansas State College of Pittsburg
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