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ambassador Report View

What affected the endangered species of Southeast Asia?

by Seungwon Lee | 21-05-2018 22:53 recommendations 0

The IPAT equation first introduced by Ehrlich and Holdren in the 1970s and conveyed that human impact (I) on the environment increases with population (P) and affluence (A) while corresponding with the development of technology (T). Human intervention in the ecosystem, no matter now trivial or insignificant it may seem, can be disastrous; humans? negligence and blindness towards the fragility of the ecosystem has ruined various parts of our ecosystem in many dimensions. China, Korea, and Japan—three nations in Southeast Asia—also had to pay the price to their inconsiderate urban development. By understanding some of examples of Southeast Asia, the rest of the world should take the lesson and prevent further ?mistakes? from repeating.

In the late 1950s, Mao Zedong initiated the Great Leap Forward (1958-1966), hoping transform China into an egalitarian society through all economic development in agriculture and heavy industry. The four goals of the movement was to stimulate ?all-around? development through 5 year plans, mass mobilization, political unanimity and zeal, and decentralization of power to provide more government control at the local level. To carry out his goals of increased agricultural productivity, he ordered sparrows to be eliminated since they feed on grains that were harvested for production. Also called the ?Four Pests Campaign?, his massive elimination of sparrows resulted in sharp decrease in the number of them, pressuring it to near extinction. Unfortunately, the Chinese government at the time misunderstood the ecosystem?s mechanism and instead ended up with dire results in the agricultural sector; killing all sparrows did no good, but added another animal to the endangered list.

For Japan, its animals and plants are still suffering from the consequences of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident in 2011. Scientists revealed that plants and animals in vicinity were exposed to radioactive doses up to 100 times greater; fish and algae are exposed to 1000 times greater doses. These dose rates were more than sufficient to reduce the reproductive success of species such as birds, rodents, and plants, especially pine and spruce. Though the long-term effects on the ecosystem remains controversial and should be further researched, we cannot deny that human intervention and technology has tortured the living organisms to a certain extent.

           Korea is absolutely not an exception. In April and May of 2015, dead porpoises were consecutively found in the Han River, a place where they do not belong in. There were three suspected reasons: either they were troubled due to consuming polluted fish, or failed to adjust to the river ecosystem after failing to return to the sea, or swam up to the Han River in avoidance of the severe pollution of the East coast. Whether which factor contributed the most, this clearly indicates that the pollution in Korean waters has reached a point that exceeds living organisms? tolerance levels.

           Though nature has the capacity to take in some pollution to its ecosystems, crossing the line can result in dire consequences that may be irreversible. Man activity is the number one cause to species becoming more and more endangered each day; even at this moment, tigers, frogs, and bears of the world somewhere are suffering, suffocating, and shivering as a result of ignorant human activities that don?t take the environment and its resilience into consideration. This negligence must stop, not tomorrow, not later, but now.

 
Porpoise found dead at the Han RiverEarless rabbit due to radiation in JapanSparrows killed during the Great Leap ForwardPoster for the Four Pests Campaign

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  • Dormant user Seungwon Lee
 
 
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8 Comments

  • Rosa Domingos says :
    Hi Seungwon!

    The tragedies in the Southern Asia region is most upsetting and we as human need to find a way to learn from that mistake and move on have a positive view on protecting and conserving the ecosystems that these species occupy.

    Thank you for the article!
    Posted 30-05-2018 21:39

  • Joon Ho Mentor says :
    To add on, public notice and announcements about specific species and taking care about them are the most important task to let them survive and remain in our environment.
    Though people used to see or detect rare species or foreign species that is not meant to live or exist in certain region, they can easily forget and let those issue go away.
    However, drastic change in policy pursuit and performance can trigger chaotic fluctuation among people to treat species, so careful approach must be followed after it, too!
    Thanks for your nice report and contemplation!
    Posted 26-05-2018 00:32

  • Joon Ho Mentor says :
    Hello Seungwon, very nice choice for symbolic and iconic pics as you can see various response from other ambassadors.
    Posted 25-05-2018 23:59

  • Gyeongrin mentor says :
    Hello Seungwon!
    As I read this report, I thought about how we could gather more interest to this problem.
    The power of pictures, posters, advertisement and any sort of media is great and the point of it is to repeat itself do that more people could see it more often. I f people are exposed to certain information for ling terms or in high frequency it is easier to them about the seriousness of the problem! Let's protect endangered species!
    Thanks for the report
    Posted 23-05-2018 18:19

  • Rohan Kapur says :
    Thanks for the report. The symbolic pic is effective, that depicts one knife killing the Eco-system.
    Posted 23-05-2018 13:30

Aaditya Singh

  • Aaditya Singh says :
    Well written report, Seungwon. It is truly disheartening to see how humans are negatively impacting the environment. I find it shocking how the Chinese government took an initiative to kill all sparrows. Another problem as you have mentioned is nuclear accidents and the negative effects are visible in the decrease of plants and animals. I hope the government takes necessary action in this regard.
    Posted 22-05-2018 03:45

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