The Herald (South Africa)

‘Globally, 60% of wildlife lost in 48 years’

- Guy Rogers rogersg@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

Almost a symbol of the crash in wildlife in Driftsands, and its reported collapse globally, the perdepis tree at the front gate of eco-activist Moki Cekisani’s Gqebera home is dying.

Cekisani, 75, recalls how he grew up in the same woodand-iron house in Wesleyan Street and people from all over the township used to come to pick leaves from the tree to boil up and drink to combat fever and headaches.

“Now the tree is dying. I’m not sure why. Maybe just because it is old,” Cekisani said.

“But all around us the environmen­t is dying.

“Residents throw down rubbish in the streets. There is a sense of not caring.

“When I was a boy and I went for my circumcisi­on in Driftsands the bush was bustling with wildlife. There were duikers and hares and yellowwood and olive trees.

“Today, they are all gone and the alien wattle and bluegum are everywhere.”

Cekisani, who is founderdir­ector of the Ubuntu & Environmen­tal Organisati­on, nods vigorously as he discusses the finding of the 2018 World Wide Fund for Nature Living Planet Report that globally 60% of wildlife – the sharp end of the web of life that supports all life on Earth, including humankind – has been lost in 48 years.

“It has been so fast. How many years are left if we continue in this way?

“We need a radical programme to teach environmen­tal awareness and conserve and expand the remaining wildlife.

“We need to get people out into the game reserves to see how important they are.

“We must speak to the children in the schools and the crowds in the stadiums.”

According to the report, it is estimated that globally nature provides services – from clean water and air to food, medicine and building supplies, and soil and pollinator­s to enable agricultur­e – worth around $125trillio­n (R1.73-quadrillio­n) a year.

But human actions are destroying this natural treasure, the report states. “We are living through the Great Accelerati­on, a unique event in the 4.5-billion-year history of our planet, with exploding human population and economic growth driving unpreceden­ted planetary change through the increased demand for energy, land and water.”

According to the report, the main reasons for the sharp dive in wildlife are the loss and degradatio­n of habitat, over-exploitati­on of resources, pollution, invasive species and climate change. Literally, wild species and farmers alike are losing the ground beneath their feet as undergroun­d organisms that influence the soil’s physical structure and chemical compositio­n disappear.

Another important sliver of fading biodiversi­ty is the pollinator­s, including especially bees and birds, which are needed to fertilise much of the plant life on which wildlife relies for food and habitat.

According to the report, more than 75% of the major food crops farmed by humankind benefit from pollinatio­n by these same species.

“Pollinatio­n increases the global value of crop production by US$235-577bn (R3.2-R7.9trillion) per year to growers alone and keeps prices down for consumers by ensuring stable supplies.”

The report’s main finding was calculated using available data for all species and regions.

“It shows an overall decline of 60% in the population sizes of vertebrate­s between 1970 and 2014.”

The foundation said an urgent global deal for nature and people was needed to “bend the curve” of the present species loss trajectory.

The initial focus should be on the period between now and 2020 when global leaders are due to review progress around the internatio­nal Convention on Biological Diversity, the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals and the Paris Agreement on Climate Change, it said.

The foundation’s directorge­neral, Marco Lambertini, said the report showed nature was not simply “a nice-to-have”.

“The nature conservati­on agenda is not only about securing the future of . . . all the amazing diversity of life we love and cherish on Earth,” he said. “It’s bigger than that.

“There cannot be a healthy, happy and prosperous future for people on a planet with a destabilis­ed climate, depleted oceans and rivers, degraded land and empty forests, all stripped of biodiversi­ty, the web of life that sustains us all.”

Wildlife and Environmen­t Society Algoa Bay branch committee member Isobel Douglas Jones said biodiversi­ty in the area was threatened by a range of factors, from off-shore bunkering and oil exploratio­n, to excess retail packaging and consequent marine plastic pollution, and developmen­ts being pushed through without proper public consultati­on.

Wildlife had the potential to create enterprise and jobs, but this was being undermined by poaching, she said.

Wilderness Foundation Africa CEO Andrew Muir said Nelson Mandela Bay should take advantage of its rich biodiversi­ty, that is still relatively intact.

“We need to mainstream this ecological wealth and link it to renewables, sustainabl­e green business and [government developmen­t programme] Operation Phakisa.

“There are huge opportunit­ies and we need to make them count,” Muir said.

 ?? Picture:EUGENE COETZEE ?? CHANGING TIMES: Moki Cekisani with the dying ‘perdepis’ tree at his front gate
Picture:EUGENE COETZEE CHANGING TIMES: Moki Cekisani with the dying ‘perdepis’ tree at his front gate

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