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stakeholder: govt agency

As others have mentioned, the main approach to maintaining quality drinking water has been through conserving watershed integrity. Adherence to the filtration avoidance criteria are a great basis for protecting the water supply and has led to a massive project on controlling the watershed. The costs of acquiring lands, setting rules and regulations, and initiating programs to protect the watershed are all justified for the protection of water. Prevention, making sure that pollutants do not enter the water in the first place, is a much less expensive and more desirable means of maintaining quality than filtering. However, leaving water unfiltered does mean that measures like these are not enough, especially if NYC govt agencies are primarily concerned with public health. Using chlorine to disinfect is only the most basic step. With microbial pathogens, especially antibiotic-resistant strains, toxic compounds, and other harmful substances in the water, money should be invested in technology that can detect and control these. Additionally, monitoring of content in the water and disease surveillance is extremely important if the city’s agencies want to stay aware of the drinking water quality. The National Research Council found that NYC’s monitoring program to be “informed”, “extensive”, and “of high quality”, but there is room for improvement. NRC suggests analyses of groundwater, randomly checking tap water in homes, and conducting rick assessments on Cryptosporidium. These are not cheap to perform, but would be important complements to an unfiltered system.

Though it is in the City’s best interests to find a cheaper way to protect the water, this is just the local agencies’ wants for the short run. If and when the quality of unfiltered water becomes too difficult to manage, the supply system will have to filtered. This is not undesirable to agencies like the EPA, who value healthy and clean water foremost, but balancing watershed management and water treatment is a big question of agencies with limited resources. As the NRC mentions in the conclusion, watershed management planning “is not a guarantee of permanent filtration avoidance”. With the growth of populations along the watersheds, and subsequent economic development, rules and regulations about activity in these areas cannot be considered a foolproof solution. Neither can simple disinfection and on-site inspections. It is in the local agencies’ best interest to continue pushing for environmental health of the basin and water source, but also to begin pursuing the more expensive technological treatments like filtration. It may seem obvious but, basic protection of the watershed area is the foundation of managing safe drinking water, which means that it needs to be both expanded into other measures when necessary, and well-maintained even when other measures are included.

Ehlers, Laura J., Max J. Pfeffer, and Charles R. O’Melia. “Making Watershed Management Work.” Environmental Science & Technology 34.21 (2000): 464A-471A. General Science Full Text (H.W. Wilson). Web. 2 Dec. 2012.

http://pubs.acs.org.remote.baruch.cuny.edu/doi/pdf/10.1021/es003466q

 

questions

  1. You’ve probably received a wide array of responses after publishing your book… What would you say the general reaction like, and how did it match/differ from your expectations?
  2. After reviews from critics and readers, are there messages in your book that you would like to clarify? Is there anything you think people are misunderstanding about your arguments or inflating (or deflating) disproportionately?
  3. Which chapter of your book, or idea in the book, is your favorite? Why do you feel passionately about this particular one?
  4. How quickly/slowly do you feel traditional conservationist stances are changing at this point? Have you been able to see any impact for which this particular book is responsible? Do you feel these recent changes/lack of change are un/satisfying?

questions

1. What kind of environmental factors contribute most to different birth outcomes? Are differences across neighborhoods related to differences in environmental quality?

2. What indicators of housing quality are most related to poorer health among residents? Is it the architectural structure, maintenance deficiencies, cracks and holes, or etc. ?

3. How are the presence of parks in neighborhoods related, if at all, to pests in and air quality of the area?

Marris 10

Marris wraps up her book with a chapter titled “A Menu of New Goals”, most of which I did not find that new. The list of seven, (protect the rights of other species, protect charismatic megafuana, slow the rate of extinctions, protect genetic diversity, define and defend biodiversity, maximize ecosystem services, and protect the spiritual and aesthetic experience of nature) seemed to be those which conservationists already have had in mind. She did however, relate them to her idea of the rambunctious garden in a few ways, such as suggesting that we change our subjective perspective of what “nature” can be so that we may find spirituality and beauty in not just “pure wilderness”. Most of the rest was a summarization of debates among conservationists and the clashes between goals they are still experiencing. She points out several problems with only focusing on a single goal, and obviously ties everything together by telling us we need to balance goals carefully. In my opinion, balancing of goals is something everyone knows already. Getting people to agree with each other, having the wisdom to discern the best thing to do, and having the power to execute plans are the main concerns. However, I did feel that the points she made afterward in the “Juggling Goals: section were more thought-provoking.

Marris claims that conservationists dislike talking about the costs of projects and that it is considered impolite to discuss something like money matters in the face of the grand project of saving Earth’s wonders. I, like Marris, think this is a ridiculous and impractical way to approach things. In order to achieve the best results, conservationists have to face the reality that not all projects are the most logical or efficient way. This is especially in regards to restoring certain historical baselines as Marris has mentioned in past chapters. I would also apply this to possible solutions she offers like Pleistocene rewilding, which seems like it would be too much of a hassle for an operation that would need to be heavily managed. Her command to “preserve open land” is something with which I also agree. All land is still part of nature, and even protecting a weedy lot from urban development is a great step. This kind of thing is something I think people intuitively desire already. Her final idea of using distinct parts of lands for specific ends is an interesting idea. Some would be for historical restoration, some for species preservation, etc., in an attempt to reach different goals at the same time. I feel that this might sound like a wonderful idea on paper, but would be rather difficult to execute in real life. With problems of jurisdictions and the strong organization needed for such projects, I am not sure if this could be a successful practical application. As Vitousek says, he would love to see ahupa’as restored to various historical baselines, “if [he] had the power the chiefs used to have…”, meaning having the kind of strong authority and execution ability. Disagreements over which part of the land is most suitable for which goal are sure to arise and interfere with good causes.
All in all, Marris ends the book with some strong points and calls us all out to be rambunctious gardeners. Whoo!

Marris 8&9

In “Designer Ecosystems” Marris discusses how humans can change environments in order to fit the needs of the environment. The typical approach is to return to the historical baseline, but Marris argues that manmade approaches can possibly lead to ecosystems that are healthier and more efficient. To back up the idea that the manmade has already become mixed into our idea of what natural is, Marris starts with the example of our mental image of a stream, which is not as close to what Nature creates on her own as we might believe. It seems like such projects can be quick fixes for small areas, but as Marris points out, many complex ecological processes may be too far damaged for us to restore with this method. I agree with Marris’ idea that we may have to rethink our approach to lands that are infested with invasives or changed beyond hope of restoration. Wasting money on hopeless causes is silly, and as in the examples of the pesky rats and nonnative grasses in Australia, I think it makes sense to consider alternative methods of bringing the ecosystem into a more desirable state rather than always pushing for the historical baseline. However, I would not want to argue for these ideas in combination with her beliefs about rewilding and accepting invasive species. The possibility of having a chance to build a successful designer ecosystems then could become a way out, excusing mistakes with those projects. I mean a “it’s okay if we mess up the ecosystem here doing this, because we can simply fix it into something better afterwards.” kind of thought pattern. I rather think that the “design”ing should be a perspective used for those lands which have already been changed by past errors. I’m not really sure how Marris feels about these things because she continues talking about possibilities, sprinkling lots of “maybe”s and “likely”s, at the end of the chapter when discussing how far we may take designer ecosystems. She even says that the relations from organisms which have developed over millions of years from natural selection will probably outperform anything humans attempt to create. I’m not sure where her confidence about introducing proxy species and moving around life strategically like chess pieces comes from if she thinks Nature is more likely to be better than us, even “up to hundreds of years in the future”.

Chapter 9, especially the latter half, involves more everyday situations of how we can make more nature everywhere. There is a lot of content in this chapter, but I think most of the discussion about what regular citizens in this chapter is pretty self-evident and nothing really new. People are already being resourceful and trying to bring spots of nature all around them, whether in parks or in gardens or streets. To my experience, people usually do seed a mixture of aesthetically pleasing plants and native plants when they want more green. As for the rest of the chapter, I’m not that sure how well the idea of corriders could work in our world where land is valued so much as private property, but I do think allowing nature more space, and encouraging plant growth in our cities’ nooks and crannies (as well as in set apart places, like parks and gardens) where we have previously built over whole ecosystems is a good, agreeable thing.

Marris 6,7

The first of these two chapters focuses on invasives and all the bad press they get. Marris claims that invasives are judged as detrimental before they are able to truly show their worth. She names a few cases where invasive species have been responsible for serious ecological and economic costs, but then goes on to tell stories of how invasive species have a bad name for only those few incidents. Many foreign species, she says, are incapable of actually causing extinctions and that they actually increase diversity in some cases. She uses researcher Sax’s study of increased diversity on islands as an example. Of course, she has to admit that this was on a per island basis and that global diversity was actually decreasing. The example only serves to show that extinctions cause by invasive species is rare — a statistic we might expect… Surely Marris is exaggerating when she suggests that everyone thinks invasives kill off native species as if they have genocidal intent in their genes. She goes on to other cases where the distinction between native and non-native species is blurred, and it is therefore difficult to say who is the invasive and who belongs. This is a good point that I like, because it speaks a lot about how humans organize reality into labels that are not necessarily efficient or logical. Is the familiar always the same as the native? Do animals that have lived in one place for a time have a “right” to that land, or “belong” there? These are questions that need more appreciation and reflection.

The next chapter, about “novel ecosystems”, discusses situations where exotic plants are introduced and then left to their own will. Marris’ argument is that these can sometimes bring better conditions to the ecosystem, more efficient nutrient cycling, faster growth, etc. The condition is sometimes, since she admits that “these new system likely do spell out homogenization and extinction, in some places.” While it may be the case that some species can be safely added to an ecosystem like her example of mangoes, she is right to say it “sometimes” works, and not even venture “the majority of times”. Even if a species becomes invasive and the population booms, she says, they become controlled with passing time. However, she does not and cannot claim this happens all the time. While species like the zebra water mussel and Canadian water weed have faded as pests, she forgets that there still exist examples like kudzu and rabbits in Austrailia that spell serious ecological and economic trouble. Not to mention that it may take decades to wait for nature to clean up the mistake, during which time the invasive species will already have wrought enough damage. This may not the most fitting example, but the Irish potato blight comes to mind and the negative  impact that potato mold had on people was temporary but intense. The ecologists Marris so makes fun of are simply operating on a “better safe than sorry” mode. In the end of the chapter, Marris mentions that much of the world is already a “novel ecosystem” by her definition, which is true. man’s touch has been that widespread. I agree that these should be studied and offer much new knowledge for us, but I am still not comfortable with the idea of going out and creating these new “novel ecosystems” as our experiments.

High Line/ Stalter

cute birdieI have been to the High Line a few times before, but I had never noticed how large the population of pollinators was until my last excursion with Melanie. Even though it is early autumn now, insects were buzzing around flowers everywhere, luckily for us. It was clear from the start of our walk down the High Line that the park supported a diverse population of flora and fauna. Pollinators we saw included an array of bees, wasps, birds, flies, other insects and a moth. It was truly interesting to see which bugs liked which flowers. The pollinators clearly had preferences for certain nectars, and some flowers were definitely more popular than others.

The compass plant’s yellow flowers were a big favorite, drawing bumblebees, flies, moths, and wasps all over. Honeybees seemed the most tolerant of any kind of flower, going from asters to [pink flowers I cannot seem to identity] to white wild spurges. We did see other insects and beetles of which we were unsure whether we could label pollinator which are not included here.

bumblee stuffing its faceanotha flyalbino and yellow honeybees :)fat bumble bumblin

I don’t think the High Line is as much of a Rambunctious Garden as I think Marris attempts to describe in her book, but I do see where the two share characteristics. The park is not in a place where plants are supposed to thrive, but we have brought them up unto where the old railroad tracks once were, “intervening” with Nature’s Way. The process has naturally brought more animal life and more plant life as we plant more blooms and people visit. It is very much a garden in the sense that the plants are cared for and monitored. As a public park, the High Line flora are maintained, and the structure of the park makes sure the plants have the right amount of water. However, the High Line is not as much of a hands on project where we introduce species like puzzle pieces from other areas. Plant diversity was high before the High Line became a managed park and caring for those plants is a focus of the High Line project. Besides this, the aim of the High Line is not to recreate an ecosystem, but just help make the previous landscape of the abandoned railway become more appealing and accessible to the public. The plantings here are mostly based on aesthetic value of the bright flowers and that feel of the abandoned railroad, while also keeping the native species as a priority. There is no active introduction of animal species as far as I can tell, and according to the park’s website, 161 of the 210 plants species of the part of the park we traversed are native to New York.

mayfly - like bug...ta daa really ugly onethe SINGLE moth we saw

Many of the plants that were self-seeded (those not artificially introduced to that land by humans) before the High Line came to be integrated in the park. The statistics in the Stalter paper show that the High Line environment had really created itself and shown that it was ready to be developed before we realized that we could exploit it for our own interests.

assisted migration

The concept discussed in chapter 5 is assisted migration, which is exactly what it sounds like. It involves humans helping animals/plants migrate into lands better suited for their survival. Marris specifically focuses on those organisms that have been affected by man-driven climate change and need to find more suitable places to live. It is not a bad idea, to think of ourselves as superheroes and step in to help fix the problems we have caused.
The question I would like to ask most is, if this becomes an accepted practice, how much responsibility are we willing to take on? If climate change is to continue, weather will become more unpredictable and the world’s average temperature even warmer. Once we start assisted migration projects, would we not have to watch over them for years? And what happens to  those creatures that finally have no cooler place to go? Yes, it is true that humans have interrupted Nature’s ways and are only recently realizing a full load of regret. The idea that we should continue intervening to correct our past interventions seems off. They will only serve to further involve us in projects for which it will be difficult to take full responsibility. Trying to fix one thing will lead us to trying to fix another, and honestly the idea of widespread assisted migration reminded me of plastic surgery addicts and their horrific resulting faces.
Considering the fact that plants and animals alike have been moving on their own, inching into outer regions of their habitat, assisted migration would only be a “speeding up” of the same natural process. Or so Marris claims. The truth is, this is far from natural. It is physically impossible for us to pay attention to every species that needs moving. As a result, we will only focus on those that are of value to us. This is a guess on my part, but wouldn’t those who would have enough economic punch to easily carry out projects most likely be large companies and corporations? Corporations, which tend to favor short-term results and profit, are not likely to take care of preserving ecosystems or taking the care necessary in such intervention.
The problem with only moving specific species feels like another layer of trouble. Animals and plants don’t exist in isolated conditions. It simply isn’t enough to have the right abiotic conditions of temperature, precipitation, etc. to promise a healthy life (but not too thriving lest it become invasive). Natural wildlife is connected in a great web of interplay, some of which are not obvious to us.
Despite these arguments (among others…), I do think assisted migration may not be a bad idea under certain circumstances. It may not be feasible for some areas, but perhaps the NYmetro can benefit from the increased biodiversity. I am simply wary of the matters of who is taking the responsibility and making the decisions about the relocation of the organisms.

rewilding

It seems like my prediction was right. Marris had started with the premise that nature is not necessarily pristine so that she might dive into the argument that human involvement in making nature “better” is good and even wanted. She goes into depth about the concept of “rewilding”, which is very much “radical” like chapter 4’s title describes.
My intuitive response is that of my first post: it is folly to think that humans have enough wisdom to build ecosystems based on their own theories. I highly doubt fixing a situation that has gotten out of hand is as easy as “just killing all of them again”. There are countless factors that play a part in any ecosystem, such that our predictions of what may result from rewilding may be completely off. According to her, we will attempt to bring in species that will fill in what we perceive as “emptied gaps” in ecosystems left by extinct ones… but will we see the right niches and match correctly? It more feels like a child playing mad chemistry professor, experimenting as he wishes until he feels satisfied.
Even if the idea of rewilding was promising enough to try, I would still hold a critical view against Marris. She offers very little convincing evidence that rewilding is such a beneficial enterprise. On the contrary, I felt that the fact that it would be “cool” to have megafauna back in North America and Europe was more developed than any empirical perspective. Most of her reasoning is human-centric, rather than nature-centric.
I am honestly having trouble following some of her logic. She outlines a case against the ideal of “pristine nature”, claiming it is a manmade concept and silly because nearly no nature on Earth has been completely out of humans’ touch. (This is somewhat a non-case to begin with since she acknowledges several times that most, if not all, ecologists are aware of this fact…) Well, the idea that megafauna are “cool” and would be great to have around is also a very manmade, culture-based product. I have no qualms with calling the idea silly as well, because resurrecting the feel of the Pleistocene period is simply not ample reason for completing these actions. For me, the book offers no really satisfying proof that megafauna are worth more than what they will cost (both economically and potentially ecologically). Species are unique. Their specific genetic traits have been fine-tuned to match their environment, and the complex interactions of different communities within their ecosystem cannot be expected to magically “recover” because we have brought a “similar” species in. She seems to believe species are different brands of batteries, and as long as the voltage is the same, they may be replaced. This is ridiculous. What extinct North American cheetahs are to African cheetahs are not what AA Energizer batteries are to AA Duracell batteries.
Lastly, I think rewilding would be extremely difficult to execute sensibly. Would the large animals have to be contained behind fences? Then how much would the money would such a project cost? These are only a couple of the many questions that would need much attention.

 

Rambunctious ch. 1-2

In Rambunctious Garden, Emma Harris’ main point is that society’s ideal of “nature” is ill-conceived and it needs to change in order to make the best of the opportunities open to us.
She claims that we generally think of the “virgin” and “pristine” as true nature (2-3), while those ecosystems brought about by man are not. These are fair claims, and she traces the birth of these ideas from the 18th and 19th centuries, reviewing how it slowly developed from thinkers such as Emerson, Thoreau and Muir (32-34). She makes it clear that these ideas have been manufactured in human minds and are not absolute principles. The Yosemite chapter also gives much support to the argument that keeping an ecosystem aligned with its “baseline”. A healthy ecosystem cannot be captured in a snapshot of a single moment, but is subject to shift according to Earth’s ever-changing conditions and surprises. Not only this, but life itself has already accounted for what we would consider “disturbances”, as evidenced by Harris’ example of seeds that need a recent forest fire to grow.
The mindset that Harris pieces apart is a paradoxical one where humans simultaneously shame themselves for human imperfection into Mother Earth and bestow themselves with the responsibility of “restoring” the perfection that once was, because we are able.
We consider humans to be so alien to “nature” that any change we bring is “degradation” (24). Humans are outsiders, trampling on the goodness of nature with a mixture of clumsiness and evilness. The idea is that anything we influence is the very opposite of nature. However, we also feel that we are so influential and powerful that we are compelled fix the problems we have wrought and bring about “restoration”.
I, like Harris, believe that this traditional style of thinking is both impractical and purely a cultural product. However, I am wary of Harris’ confidence that we are able to be responsible gardeners of the “rambunctious garden” Earth has become. It’s my impression that she is not just merely suggesting that we stop trying to aim for repairs but begin developing our own ecosystems (something only hinted here, but the chapter titles are telling). It is true that we often give exaggerated significance to nature untouched by man, but do we trust man to make the right and wise decisions necessary to build a better future? One of the points Harris brings up in the Yellowstone chapter is the complexity and constant flux of most ecosystems makes it basically impossible to recreate (let alone manage) how an ecosystem used to be. Who says that we know enough about Earth’s cycles and flora that we are able to create environments we have in mind?
There is reason why human activity  has built up stigma. A book I have recently read, Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed by Jared Diamond, covers a myriad of examples of how humans have misjudged, created change in their environment, and brought their own demise. An example shared by both books is the rabbit and fox populations of Australia. While Harris focuses on the ridiculousness and burdensomeness of the attempt to rid the continent of the pests, Diamond delves deeper into other implications of their population boom. Rabbits are responsible for eating so much of Australia’s plant-life that native herbivores struggle to survive the competition, as well as domesticated animals that are vital to the country’s economy like sheep and cattle. The pests are not simply pests because they do not belong or ruin a “historical baseline”, but they literally eating away Australian’s income and well-being. The problem is so great that every year, a few hundred million dollars are spent on rabbit control alone. It is not unlikely that well-intended projects can become disasters.
While it is silly to consider traditional “pristine wilderness” as perfection, the underlying (and more powerful) notion is that nature has gradually come to achieve that kind of balance over countless years. I trust that ecosystems can and will find new balance as humans introduce new species and tinker with finding the “better” and “best” combinations. But that process may not necessarily go as we imagine. I agree with most of Harris’ points but I do feel that there is a certain degree of security we can find with traditional protected lands as compared to human ventures.

Comments by jennylee