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posted by martyb on Friday August 21 2015, @01:01PM   Printer-friendly
from the we-are-number-one dept.

An article in the LA Times discusses a publication in the journal Science (abstract) on why humans as predators have a much greater ecological impact than other predators.

From the LA Times article, it is because:

... humans have a very different, and problematic, hunting strategy from nature's other successful hunters. Humans tend to pick out adults rather than younger, smaller, weaker members of a species.

The article goes on to use an analogy:

Think of it from a business perspective, the researchers said. An adult female, for example, is like your capital; the young that she produces are the interest generated by that capital. If you kill an adult animal today, it will take years for another to grow up and take her place. But if you kill a young animal, it will (theoretically) take only until the next breeding season to produce another. In other words, it's better to use the up [sic] interest rather than to draw down the capital, because the capital is much more difficult to build back. Once it's gone, it's gone -- and so is the interest.

This has several consequences, including for the evolution of the prey species. For example, killing the biggest or strongest animals (as might be done with trophy hunting) potentially leads to smaller or weaker future generations.


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  • (Score: 1) by eof on Friday August 21 2015, @07:08PM

    by eof (5559) on Friday August 21 2015, @07:08PM (#225981)

    A world without wild species sounds unappealing to me. According to one site [chgeharvard.org]

    Of the myriad species of plants and animals available for human consumption, modern agriculture uses only a few. According to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization, only 12 plant species provide 75% of our total food supply, and only 15 mammal and bird species make up over 90% of livestock production.

    Beyond leading to a limited world, there is the potential for trouble. There have already been problems with the reliance on monocultures when it comes to plants (the Cavendish banana comes to mind as one example). Do humans believe they can protect domesticated animals from all potential dangers?

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 21 2015, @09:43PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 21 2015, @09:43PM (#226051)

    the Cavendish banana comes to mind as one example

    Pedant here! Perhaps you meant the Gros Michel banana [wikipedia.org].