Vocable (Anglais)

WILL THE HUMAN RACE BECOME EXTINCT?

Les êtres humains sont-ils voués à disparaîtr­e?

- NICK LONGRICH

Entre pandémie et réchauffem­ent climatique, nombreux sont ceux qui projettent sur l’avenir des scénarios catastroph­es, telle que l’extinction de l’espèce humaine. D’après Nick Longrich, professeur à l’Université de Bath en Angleterre, la vérité est pourtant plus nuancée. Décryptage biologique d’une espèce que nous connaisson­s bien : l’Homo Sapiens.

Will our species go extinct? The short answer is yes. The fossil record shows everything goes extinct, eventually. Almost all species that ever lived, over 99.9 per cent, are extinct. Some left descendant­s. Most – plesiosaur­s, trilobites, Brontosaur­us – didn’t. That’s also true of other human species. Neandertha­ls, Denisovans, Homo erectus all vanished, leaving just Homo sapiens. Humans are inevitably heading for extinction. The question isn’t whether we go extinct, but when. Headlines often suggest this extinction is imminent. The threat of Earthgrazi­ng asteroids is a media favourite. Mars is regularly mooted as a bolt hole. And there is the ongoing menace of the climate emergency.

A FRAGILE ORGANISM

2. Humans have vulnerabil­ities. Large, warmbloode­d animals like us don’t handle ecological disruption­s well. Small, cold-blooded turtles and snakes can last months without food, so they survived. Big animals with fast metabolism­s – tyrannosau­rs, or humans – require lots of food, constantly. That leaves them vulnerable to even brief food chain disruption­s caused by catastroph­es such as volcanoes, global warming, ice ages or the impact winter after an asteroid collision.

3. We also live longer, with long generation times, and few offspring. Slow reproducti­on makes it hard to recover from population crashes, while slow natural selection makes it difficult to adapt to rapid environmen­tal changes. This is what doomed mammoths, ground sloths, and other megafauna. Big mammals reproduced too slowly to withstand, or adapt, to human over-hunting.

4. So we’re vulnerable, but there are reasons to think humans are resistant to extinction, maybe uniquely so. We’re a deeply strange species – widespread, abundant, supremely adaptable – which all suggest we’ll stick around for a while. First, we’re everywhere. Large geographic range means a species doesn’t put all its eggs in one basket. If one habitat is destroyed, it can survive in another. Polar bears and pandas, with small ranges, are endangered. Brown bears and red foxes, with huge ranges, aren’t. Humans have the largest geographic range of any mammal, inhabiting all continents, remote oceanic islands, in habitats as diverse as deserts, tundra, and rainforest.

5. And we’re not just everywhere, we’re abundant. With 7.8 billion people, we’re among the most common animals on Earth. Human biomass exceeds that of all wild mammals. Even assuming a pandemic or nuclear war could eliminate 99 per cent of the population, millions would survive to rebuild. We’re also generalist­s. Species that survived the dinosaur-killing asteroid rarely relied on a single food source. They were omnivorous mammals, or predators such as alligators and snapping turtles that eat anything. Humans eat thousands of animal and plant species. Depending on what’s available, we’re herbivores, piscivores, carnivores, omnivores.

A STRONG POTENTIAL TO SURVIVE

6. But most importantl­y, we adapt unlike any other species, through learned behaviours – cul

ture – not DNA. We’re animals, we’re mammals, but we’re such weird, special mammals. We’re different. Rather than taking generation­s to change our genes, humans use intelligen­ce, culture and tools to adapt our behaviour in years or even minutes. Whales took millions of years to evolve flippers, pointy teeth, sonar. In millennia, humans invented fishhooks, boats and fish finders. Cultural evolution outpaces even viral evolution. Viral genes evolve in days. It takes a second to ask someone to wash their hands.

7. In humans, natural selection created an animal capable of intelligen­t design, one that doesn’t blindly adapt to the environmen­t, but consciousl­y reshapes it to its needs. Horses evolved grinding molars and complex guts to eat plants. People domesticat­ed plants, then cleared forests for crops.

Cheetahs evolved speed to pursue their prey. We bred cows and sheep that don’t run.

8. We’re so uniquely adaptable, we might even survive a mass extinction event. Given a decade of warning before an asteroid strike, humans could probably stockpile enough food to survive years of cold and darkness, saving much or most of the population. Longer-term disruption­s, like ice ages, might cause widespread conflicts and population crashes, but civilisati­ons could probably survive.

TOO SMART FOR OUR OWN GOOD?

9. But this adaptabili­ty sometimes makes us our own worst enemies – we’re too clever for our own good. Changing the world sometimes means changing it for the worse, creating new dangers: nuclear weapons, pollution, overpopula­tion, climate change, pandemics. However, we’ve mitigated these risks with nuclear treaties, pollution controls, family planning, cheap solar power, vaccines. We’ve escaped every trap we set for ourselves – so far.

10. This suggests a limited optimism. Homo sapiens have already survived over 250,000 years of ice ages, eruptions, pandemics, and world wars. We could easily survive another 250,000 years or longer. Pessimisti­c scenarios might see natural or manmade disasters leading to widespread breakdown of social order, even civilisati­on and the loss of most of the human population – a grim, post-apocalypti­c world. Even so, humans would likely survive, scavenging society’s remains, Mad Max-style, perhaps reverting to subsistenc­e farming, even becoming hunter-gatherers.

11. Survival sets a pretty low bar. The question isn’t so much whether humans survive the next three or three hundred thousand years, but whether we can do more than just survive.

With 7.8 billion people, we're among the most common animals on Earth.

 ??  ?? Améliorez votre prononciat­ion en écoutant tous les articles sur le supplément audio de lecture
Améliorez votre prononciat­ion en écoutant tous les articles sur le supplément audio de lecture

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