| 
      
	Sensitive viewers, welcome to Planet Earth: Our Loving Home. Scientific 
experts fear that our world is in the midst of its sixth mass extinction
 and say its cause is human actions. 
 In a two-part series we'll 
explore the challenges facing global biodiversity including the extreme 
dangers posed by global warming, the necessity of species preservation 
to ensure the survival of humankind as well as the most effective tools 
for biodiversity conservation and mitigating climate change.
 
 Janez Potocnik - European Commissioner for Environment (M):
 Biodiversity, it's an issue which was sometimes too much in the shadow.
 Also in the shadow of the climate change, which is extremely important,
 but we should understand that biodiversity is actually the other side 
of the same coin.
 
 HOST: A study published in the US journal 
Science examined the biodiversity levels between 1954 and 2004 in the UK
 as measured by approximately 20,000 British government-funded 
naturalists who collected data on the nation's native butterflies, birds
 and plants.
 
 It was found that between 1974 and 2004, 70% of the
 butterfly species saw population declines as did 54% of bird species 
and 28% of plant species.
 
 In 2004, the International Union for 
the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which publishes the well-known Red 
List of Threatened Species estimated in a report entitled 『A Global 
Species Assessment』 that plants and animals are going extinct 100 to 
1,000 times faster than the background rate, or the natural rate of 
extinction before humans became the primary cause of extinctions, based 
on fossil records.
 
 In early October 2010, Simon Stuart, chair of
 the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's Species 
Survival Commission pointed out that prominent Harvard University, USA 
biologist Dr. EO Wilson's previous estimates that within two decades the
 rate of species loss could be 10,000 times the background rate appears 
to be on the mark.
 
 Commenting on Dr. Wilson's predictions, he 
stated,  『All the evidence is he's right. Some people claim it already 
is that ... things can only have deteriorated because of the drivers of 
the losses, such as habitat loss and climate change, [are] all getting 
worse."
 
 
 |