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Downstate Stakeholder – Don’t take it out on the New Yorkers!

Home to over 18.9 million people, the New York City Metropolitan Area, consisting of “New York City, Long Island, Northern New Jersey, and Northeastern Pennsylvania” (Vintinner) requires tremendous efforts in waste disposal and clean drinking water. New York City prides itself in the quality of its drinking water that boasts to be the “champagne of drinking waters” (Vintinner). To further protect our valuable resource, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) spread the Surface Water Treatment Rule (SWTR), giving Governor Pataki the options to filter the source water or meet a level of water quality.

The tremendous costs of building and maintaining the filtration plant in the Catskill Delaware water supply would paid by the New Yorkers themselves but it would hit the lower income families the most, doubling their water rates, and effectively closing the housing projects where landlords cannot raise additional water costs. While the argument of maintaining water quality remains one of the utmost important priorities for the metropolitan area, if there is not enough funding to carry it through, it will need the minimal amount of resources possible to keep it functioning.

Mayor Bloomberg announced on November 30th that Hurricane Sandy victims will have relief from their water bills. They have not had access to their supplies because of their damaged property. Any “residential and commercial buildings that have been red- or yellow-tagged by the city will not have to make a monthly water bill payment until June 1, 2013” (Wrobleski). Bloomberg said, “by deferring water bill payments and other charges, New Yorkers can focus their attention and money on more immediate and pressing needs.” New Yorkers currently need time to recooperate and having to pay more to filter the water is not our immediate priority. Perhaps by next year when people have resituated into new neighborhoods and new living conditions, it would be logical to develop a filtration system that protects the purity of the water in Catskill/Delaware water supply.

The reality is that New York is not ready for another major financial burden while in its recovery state. Thus, the responsibility of paying for these burdens should fall on the company that are pollution or poorly managing their wastes. One of the major causes of microbial contamination is poor waste disposal by large municipal waste treatment systems. Economists say that companies involve in these activities and who are largely responsible should pay for their damage to society or a Pigovian Tax.

Source:

Wrobleski, Tom. “NYC to give Hurricane Sandy victims more time to pay water bills.” Staten Island Advance[Staten Island] 30 Nov 2012, n. pag. Web. 2 Dec. 2012. <http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2012/11/city_to_give_hurricane_sandy_v.html>.

 

 

 

Q’s for Emma Marris

1. Where do you see more of these rambunctious gardens being built? I feel like New York did a great job on the High Line Park. How can we replicate that elsewhere?

2. Has your views differed from before you wrote the book to after your wrote the book? Did you change your stance since?

3. You mentioned protecting charismatic megafauna as one of your goals. But how does protecting larger species fair for competing species? How do we place one species over another?

4. How do we maximize the utility of plants and undiscovered plant species in an urban area or apply it to an urban area?

5. What value do you see pleistocene rewilding in an urban setting? Can there be a harmony and synergy in their coexistence?

10.7.12 – Poster Questions

1. In the tri-state area, what are some of the effects on the plant species based on the progression of the pollinator species? Have they grown or declined?

2. What is the ecological progression among the species between Westchester, New York City, Long Island, and New Jersey? What are some of the triggers for this?

3. What are some of the trends among the bodies of water around the tri-state area that can be observed within species, climate, and soil?

 

Ch 10 – Rambunctious Gardens!

Emma Marris takes her reader to the final destination. She discusses where the reader fits in. There is no “perfect restoration” method. People have to take into account “budgets, politics, and time” and realize it no longer is feasible. Some of the decisions to be made are whether or not we preserve species in their native ecosystems or displace them. The ultimate solution is not clear and it’ll require deliberation among landowners, governments, and people truly passionate enough to want to make a difference. Marris lines up her action steps that she deems necessary and her goals revolve around coexisting.

Rambunctious gardens become the much needed compromise that our current societies are missing. Land ethics which Marris defines how humans extend moral obligations to “soils, waters, plants, and animals” (Marris). Much of Marris’ ideologies can be traced back to Arne Naess, a Norwegian philosopher who held a “biocentric view of life” (Marris) where all life is linked to us, so in essence by protecting and maintaining the environment around us. This ideology is called deep ecology. Simultaneously, while we respect all the species, threatening species may need to be regulated to ensure biodiversity. With respect to all living, breathing organism, what happens to the forests, mountains, and rivers. Ethicists believe that “these entities have their own intrinsic value” (Marris). It’s important to place them on the same importance as the myriads of animal species and at the very bottom it would be valid to always put human development beneath all else.

Out of all the species in the world, it almost seems ridiculous to target our attention to charismatic megafauna which would consist of “big mammals with big eyes” (Marris). However, Marris makes a point that these “whales, dolphins, elephants, gorillas, tigers, and pandas” (Marris) live in ecosystems that support a slew of species that aren’t visible to us. Marris argues that umbrella conservation becomes the most effective and efficient way to protect these areas. Ecologists and other experts believe there’s mainly one solution however, each country actually needs to be dealt with independently. This leads into the next set of objectives for Marris. Many times conservation simply is delaying the diminishing factor that kills of the number of a certain species. Conservationists usually set the goal as returning “the rate of extinctions to its ‘background rate’ before human activity” (Marris). Another factor that is mentioned is the funding required to pass the threshold of success. A certain amount of funding would be necessary to complete a task. However if there is not enough funding to complete the project, it would be a wasted effort. The question raised targets the feasibility of preservation financially.

Aside from philosophies and other methods, Marris explains some of her other goals such as improving the genetic diversity of the environment. To an extent, this is accomplished by the Endangered Species Act. The importance of these actions fits within her big picture of the artificial, half-manufacture nature. Many people focus on individual species in an ecosystem and fail to see the big picture and miss that increasing genetic biodiversity is the key. A larger gene pool helps along years of evolution thus prolonging our chances of recreating former ecosystems.

Designer Ecosystems

What many people believe to be natural in the wilderness actually contains anthropogenic influences.  The ideal kind of river that most are accommodated to are the meandering rivers  “thought of as ‘natural’ today” (Marris). By following the methods for creating these streams, conservationists consequently raise mercury levels in the river. There was no efficient way to optimize the environment through restoration. In fact, it was near impossible to restore the ecosystem back to the baseline. One solution to this problem is designer ecosystems.

Rather than restoring what was previously existing, these ecologists study how these environment operate and design. These restoration jobs can be counted as a redesign because these designers never achieve the level of biodiversity of what previously thrived in the area. Restoration ecologists “use lots of ‘hacks’”(Marris) to manipulate the natural environment to function harmoniously. Some great examples are having “wire baskets filled with rocks or the root balls of dead trees chained in place to slow stream flows
and create nooks and crannies for animals” and also having “old ships sunk to provide places for coral reefs to live” (Marris). These hacks are merely natural mimicry that recreates items utilized by creatures in the wild to shelter themselves. On the other side of the spectrum, we see scientists thowing the idea of restoring out the window and instead suggest the idea of “designing, engineering, cooking up”(Marris) strategies that heal the natural world.

Coming from humbler origins, some scientists simply call it “whatever works” (Marris). Dee Boersma, a Seattle ecologist seeks to preserve the Galapagos penguin through introducing a new habitat. Boersma simply “makes the habitat better than ‘normal’ for the birds” (Marris). The point to revisit is that these habitats work because these ecoystems are ever changing ones. When they try to restore environments, they are simply bringing about the habitat’s new current state. Baselines have been rendered moot since the Pre-European human alteration.

The third case to examine is a hybrid ecosystem that discusses abiotic alterations to the environment. Despite the minor climate shift, the organism can still survive. For instance, the “eucalyptus woodlands in Southwest Australia” (Marris) survived some mild climate shifts. What would benefit the woodlands would be the fertilizing methods, These scientists let us know how species react to the climate shifts and how to react when it does happen.

Faced with environmental dilemmas, these ecologists will be able to scope effective restoration campaigns. Science is constantly breaking ground and we begin asking ourselves, can we get the best from both worlds? Nature continually teaches us the relationships and behaviors of various species and how the interactions can be different through various methods of restoration.

Perspective (Chapter 6 & 7)

Stories of invasive species taking over an ecosystem, wiping out another species spread as rampantly as these invasive species themselves. However, this term “invasive species” seems to be rather new.  Humans have been introducing new species to environments constantly, from the “root balls of nursery trees, in packing material, in ballast water, in the wheel wells of aircraft, and in the mud on our boots” (Marris). These newly introduced species “naturalize” quite comfortably at times and adapt into its new home very well, to the point it disrupts the balance of the existing ecosystem.

Movements began during the 1990’s to repair the destructive effects of invasive species. In 1995, South African non-profit, Working for Water “created jobs for poor people removing invasive plants that “divert enormous amounts of water from more productive uses” (Marris). In 1999, Clinton launched a campaign for “all agencies to avoid spreading them and to stamp them out, wherever possible” (Marris). People began to realize the harm that these newly introduced species exceeded what the environment could sustain. National Park Service organized strike teams to eliminate harmful species. An ecosystem evolves and although all these scientists and movements hold evidence that these organism affect their surroundings for the worst, they should know that no species is really native or invasive rather the quantity of the change. Any drastic environmental shift will hurt the environment at first until it plateaus into a more static ecosystem.

Movement among nature is natural. This movement refers to the gradual migration of a species into a new territory. Mark Davis, an ecologist at Macalester University challenges the 1990’s ideology of invasive species stating it might not be necessarily a negative thing to have new species as species have always been migrating, just at different rates. People often overlook the case studies where species improve on existing ecosystems. Rather than compete with the native species, “Pyura praeputialis, a squidgy brown sea-squirt-like creature from Australia, has increased biodiversity on Chilean rocky tidal shores by cementing itself down and creating a gelatinous landscape in which large invertebrates and algae can thrive” (Marris). Sometimes invasive species serve as a replacements or shelter for existing species. Jeff Foster at the University of Illinois and Scott Robinson at the University of Florida discovered exotic birds that “are dispersing the seeds of native plants since many native birds have gone extinct” (Marris). In Britain, blue tit chicks found gall wasps as a replacement for the endangered caterpillars. Nature demonstrates that invasive species or unfamiliar species can actually serve to improve an ecosystem.

Scientists, politicians, and businessmen should strive to maintain the delicate balance of our environment before further damages is done. Some viable next moves would be to research into the species in each ecosystem and their roles. Then, find replacements and back-up plans that would be feasible in terms of execution and cost-efficiency. Politicians would drive the regulations and enforce the rules amongst society so that corporations and people alike will all cooperate and abide by the rules to further protect the environment. Businessmen would be the ones to raise the funds and develop strategies to spread the word out. Social entrepreneurs would engage their audience to encourage people to donate and raise funds that directly contribute to the reconstruction and development of damaged environments. Together they would be able to build a better future to repair ecosystems and the tarnished names of some “invasive species.”

 

 

 

Low Hanging Fruits on the High Line

A view from the High Line – 23rd Street Entrance

In Marris’ description of the “rambunctious garden,” she imagines a partially managed environment. One that boasts a combination of implanted species and native species, controlled by humans and made to coexist peacefully with our existence and constant development. Our former preconceived notions about the wilderness were not feasible for modern human development. Rather we had to embrace our growth and incorporate bits and pieces of pre-existing species into developed area. Marris did leave a word of warning to the dangers of practicing assisted migration and tampering with nature’s balance.

New York is the perfect environment that best demonstrates efforts to preserve nature and introduce nature in areas that scream urbanization. The High Line Park is one such example. The High Line, located on 10th Avenue, runs from Gansevoort St. up to West 30th Street. Its original intended purpose was to “support the weight of four fully-loaded freight trains” and was built to “last hundreds of years” (Stalter). It was always meant for greatness and when it was destroyed, a non-profit organization fought to preserve it and transform what was left into an “elevated rail viaduct near the Bartille Opera House in Paris, the Promenade Plantee” (Stalter). 4 billion dollars later, New Yorkers now get to enjoy a great park and the species indigenous and implanted.

Pollinator #1

Assisted migration became a reality. High Line Park refutes any impossibilities that says species are not able to survive and flourish in another ecosystem. Plant species that were not native to New York settled quite comfortably in the subtler climate of the west side of the city.  The High Line “consisted of 161 species in 122 genera in 48 families” (Stalter). Native species made up 50.9% of the flora.

As I traversed the High Line, I observed the interaction between the species in the ecosystem. I could not capture the white-pinkish hued birds that kept swooping down every time a tourist dropped a muffin crumb or fruit and returning to perch on the corners of high-rise luxury condos.

Pollinator #2

It’s exciting to see an ecosystem rich in biodiversity and unique to itself. While Marris states the dangers and irresponsibility within scientists that do not conduct enough research or one who do and do not take into account microorganism whose behavior cannot be predicted.  Fortunately I caught many pollinators that day I visited the High Line Park. After a couple minutes of walking, these little buggers were zipping around from plant to plant. I even found a species resembling a fig tree. It’s always a treat to walk through the corridors of Chelsea’s “rambunctious garden.” You always find what you’re not looking for and the High Line Park’s popularity is a statement in itself. Mankind simply needs more gardens.

Assisted Migration: Nature’s laboratory

An ecosystem connects all the living and non-living components in a balanced harmony. A cycle of producers, consumers, and decomposers maintain this system’s existence. When organisms living in the habitats face drastic climate shifts, some are unable to adapt and die off. The choice for migration no longer becomes feasible. Conservationists now debate the decision to implant these distressed organisms, and the positive and negative effects on the ecosystems.

Usually these climate shifts can be traced back to human development, dating back as early as the Pleistocene extinction. The going concerns with these species reside in their inability to live outside their preferred temperature range and precipitation pattern. Some species do not have high “thresholds of tolerance beyond which they do not survive or cannot successfully reproduce” (Marris). Human interference indeed does disrupt the existing ecosystem and some species do not adapt as well as other.

While a butterfly may “move more easily across a landscape than can a plant” (Marris), butterflies lay their eggs of a selected species of plants and rely on the plants. Then there are plants that reproduce via “insect or bird pollinators” (Marris). The plants face extinction when their pollinators escape northward to avoid the heat. Marris presents assisted migration as a solution for this burgeoning problem.

Assisted migration describes the act of transplanting species into a similar ecosystem elsewhere. The goal is to preserve an endangered species in a similar habitat. One argument against this proposal state that “humanity accidentally creates an invasive species” because we do not know the exact “soil microbes or microclimatic conditions” (Marris) suited for the species involved. Test samples of the soil, plants, fungi, bacteria, and animals should be studied to source the food chain and inter-species dependency.

Connie Barlow, a preacher and committed environmentalist has replanted the T. taxifolia in North Carolina, which is not its native location. They studied the characteristics of this species and determined it was not a “hugely problematic invasive species” (Marris) because its seeds were not “dispersed by wind” (Marris). They calculated the risk and understood the plant’s growth limit. Ecologists like Jessica Hellman at Notre Dame University have broken down their observations on assisted migration in hopes to create a guide that encourages and educates readers to explore assisted migration in their own communities. One of University of Ontario’s Ph.D students, Caroline Williams have gathered to form a team to identify the Garry Oak and its potential migration destinations. In the process of discovering what organisms are linked to the Garry Oak, she has found the swallowtails and duskywinged skippers. Using her method of researching native species and related organisms, she has discovered a scientific process for assisted migration. One could simply research the land and an ecosystem’s properties, how far its effects are, and can it adapt. Assisted migration currently exists and we can observe how ecosystems embrace change in species, and steps to control it.

 

Rewilding: A Foreseeable Future.

Concept of rewilding Rewilding simply means conservation what existed prior: “the pristine wilderness.” The Białowieża forest experienced its own rewilding because the forest often became “a game preserve for royals and other elites” (Marris). The first instance of human influence began in 1409 with “Władysław Jagiełło, king of Poland and Lithuania” (Marris) who hunted game for his army to fight off the Teutonic Knights. Under 19th century Russian rule, humans killed off some bears and wolves that competed with them for game. In World War I, Germans logged over 5% of the forest and hunted the bison aggressively, lowering their numbers significantly. Rewiliding seems to be the only solution in minimizing human damage upon the great wilderness, restoring nature back to their baselines, but under what guidelines?

Rewilding began under Hermann Göring as a personal conquest for bison, deer and boar. However, this transformed quickly as he “ordered the game protected and local people expelled from the forest villages and murdered in large numbers” (Marris). The idea that the wilderness contained a limited amount of resources always existed and ironically, people always ended up rewilding the wilderness by accident, restoring a certain level of pre-existing biodiversity.

The director of the University of Warsaw’s Geobotanical Station, Bogdan Jaroszewicz finds a certain wonder with the “aura of the forest” (Marris) something innate within each of us that is able to connect to the great wilderness. While nature isn’t conducive to human progress and development, it remains a place humans can seek solace and reconnect to their origins. Athough efforts of rewilding may be generally beneficial, the same can be said for the counterargument. “Megafauna” such as the wild horses, mammoths, mastodons, ground sloths, glyptodont, short faced bears, camels, sabre-tooth tigers, lions and cheetahs from prehistoric eras died off because of their inefficient calories consumption. They consumed too many calories and over the long period of time, it become impossible for the environment to sustain such gigantic consumers. It’s ridiculous to try to revisit this baseline because at some point in time, these creatures were dominant members of this ecosystem. One of Marris’ ideas states that nature constantly changes and morphs to accomodate the inhabitants.

Yet the feasibility exists. Some of the “North American groups used fire to clear areas to promote new green growth” (Marris), attracting all sorts of game. Australians also utilized fire to bend nature and rejuvenate it. For example, they used fire to clear paths for travel, encourage plant growth, and attract herbivores for game.  If our ancestors understood the methods for rebuilding the environment, why can’t we recreate that phenomenon?

Dave Foreman, an environmental activist promotes a purist view of preservation, insisting that nature should be devoid of people. (Ironically, the man who appreciate nature exclaims that man should not be in it) One quote from Aldo Leopold, an American author and environmentalist states, “one of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds” (Marris). These radical environmental activists do not realize that the costs for rewilding may be greater for some areas than others and definitely can be realized. However, reasonable goals must be set in order for humankind in order to reach them. Harmony between humans and nature exists nonetheless. Nature is whatever exists and adapts to the current ecosystem.

 

“But it was always nature”

Emma Marris lays out her argument clearly from the first paragraph of Rambunctious Garden: Saving Nature in a Post-Wild World “We have also lost nature in another sense. We have misplaced it. We have hidden nature from ourselves” (Marris). While the “carefully managed national parks and vast boreal forest and uninhabited arctic” (Marris) belong to nature, New Yorkers take for granted the man-made surroundings of the city and the “invasive” pests. These quotidian sights certainly fit in the umbrella term of nature as much as the next wilderness. As comprehensive as nature can be, it can no longer be “pristine” (Marris).

Much of the ruin and decay can be attributed to the human expansion. The effect of human development upon the earth cannot be ignored. Humans bend the environment to their will and in the process affect ecosystems around them. For example, “bobcat families move into foreclosed homes”, “Yellowstone moose birth calves” near human activity, and songbird reach “full throat to car alarm sequences” (Marris).  Marris does not appear to be shocked by the adaptation amongst wildlife. Humans recognize the extent of their effect include “climate change, species movements, and large-scale transformations of land” (Marris). The next step would be to realize our role in this new ecosystem then take action by conserving the wilderness and even transplanting it to cities.  Conservationists strive to achieve a harmony between lost wilderness and current ecosystems. To “find beauty in nature, even if signs of humanity are present”(Marris) would be my goal.

Conservationists work towards returning to a baseline within an area. Restoration falls under our ethical responsibility because “we broke it; therefore we must fix it” (Marris). Leaving the area better than its existing condition would improve the ecosystem. First, conservationists revisit a baseline. Then, an area undergoes a transformation by recreating water bodies, replacing species, and reconstructing habitats. What is important to note is that this ecosystem is nature despite being man-made. Nature constantly changes, even without human hands.

Marris’ definition of nature shatters preconceived notions of nature in mainstream media. I occasionally daydream because of my wanderlust for lush forests and distant wilderness. This “nature” no longer matches the current definition.  I can appreciate her point that nature is omnipresent and the future lies in restoring as many baseline features in our ecosystems, be they urban or rural. Our heavy human hands have pummeled our dreams of a “virgin wilderness” and perhaps it might be the best to recreate bits and pieces of an earlier ecosystem within our modern city. My favorite example of this ideology being put into practice exists in Chelsea, Manhattan. The High Line runs from Gansevoort Street all the way up to the West 40’s. Real estate development companies reconstructed this dilapidated elevated railway track into an urban park filled with a diverse species of native and non-native wildlife. I can come to terms with this kind of unobtrusive nature that does not mirror the wilderness but embraces it.

Twilight at 20th Street By Jim Henderson

Should Nature Adapt to Humans?

“Anthropocene” traces its meaning from its greek roots. The prefix, “anthro-” comes from  “anthropos” referencing man or human , and “cene” stems from “kainos,” the current geological period. On the same spectrum lies the term, “urban ecology,” a similar term that describes an environment support human growth and maintains some elements of nature. In Conservation in the Anthropocene and Human Domination of Earth’s Ecosystems, Kareiva and Vitousek both depict a future where humans  spread their influence to all walks of life and control the “cycle of the planet’s ecology and geochemistry” (Kareiva). Beginning at the dawn of the industrial revolution, the anthropocene triggered the plague of human development which has steadily crippled the natural environment and brought about a more resilient “urban ecology.”

Humans have undoubtedly contaminated oceans as far as the Arctic with pesticides, and infected its environment’s inhabitants as a result. Endangered species and wilderness soon will not be able to thrive in habitats ruined by human expansion. The American chestnut, the passenger pigeon, and Stellar’s Sea Cow no longer exist.  All signs seem to point south and demonstrate nature’s “fragility.” However, Kareiva suggests that nature’s resilience and adaptability. Surprisingly after the Chernobyl incident and nuclear bombs tests at Bikini Atoll, wildlife still remained and increased. Coyotes can be seen in Chicago and peregrine falcons still reside in San Francisco. These species have adapted to the change in human development. Kareiva presents a solution to preserving the environment that embraces human development. “Protecting biodiversity for its own sake has not worked. Protecting nature that is dynamic and resilient” (Kareiva) becomes a sustainable option.

Vitousek provides a couple reasons why mankind’s advancement and nature’s decline go hand in hand with one another. Land transformation limits biological diversity, fisheries create an imbalance in marine ecosystem via overfishing. Yet the largest pervading problem caused by human development is the increase of carbon dioxide (CO2). What is more frightening is that the “concentration of CO2 as it has increased steadily from 315 ppm to 362 ppm” (Vitousek), compared to steady 280 ppm that lasted thousands of years until the 1800s. This carbon dioxide spike originates from fossil fuel combustions which now directly furthers the greenhouse gas effect. While most of the water on earth remains inaccessible by humans, the precious remainder of this runoff water gets threaded through dams which change the chemical makeup of rivers and damaged some other water bodies. Vitousek hints that there should be a point where humans should balance back the ecology.

Vitousek’s tone becomes more defeatist towards the end stating that “the momentum of human population growth, together with the imperative for further economic development in most of the world, ensures that our dominance will increase” (Vitousek) which really tells the audience, nature does not stand a chance against humankind. It must bend to our will. His solution to the problem of human development relies on two passive ideas: slowing down the rate of change and understanding the earth’s ecosystems.  “Humans and human-dominated systems may be able to adapt to slower change, and ecosystems and the species they support may cope more effectively with the changes we impose, if those changes are slow” (Vitousek).  I certainly look through the same lens as Kareiva, who persuades his readers to abandon false hopes and embrace what currently adapts to human development and preserve those ecosystems.

 

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