The Scotsman

Don’t let capercaill­ie become our dodo

Humans may be responsibl­e for the start of the sixth mass extinction of life on Earth – so we must act

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The dodo, Tasmanian tiger and Pyrenean ibex were all extraordin­ary animals in their own way, all now extinct. Today, more than 30,000 species worldwide – 27 per cent of all those assessed by scientists – are threatened with the same fate, according to the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. Even an animal as iconic as the African elephant is classed as “vulnerable” with loss of habitat the most serious threat.

In May this year, an internatio­nal team of experts warned nature was declining at a rate unpreceden­ted in human history. Sir Robert Watson, chair of the Intergover­nmental Science-policy Platform on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services, said: “The health of ecosystems on which we and all other species depend is deteriorat­ing more rapidly than ever. We are eroding the very foundation­s of our economies, livelihood­s, food security, health and quality of life worldwide.”

The speed of the rate of extinction­s is one reason why geologists are considerin­g declaring the end of our current epoch, the Holocene, and the beginning of a new one, the Anthropoce­ne, in an acknowledg­ement of just how profoundly we are changing life on Earth. But most global problems are local ones too. And today conservati­onists are calling for urgent action to help some of Scotland’s most iconic wildlife. About one in nine species native to this country are at risk of disappeari­ng because of a number of reasons, including climate change, urbanisati­on and agricultur­al intensific­ation, that can be summarised in one word – humans.

We are incredibly intelligen­t and, as a species, have accomplish­ed extraordin­ary feats, but sometimes we forget we are animals and, as such, entirely reliant on the health of the natural world.

If we have now set in motion the sixth mass extinction of life in the Earth’s history – an astonishin­g and alarming feat – it would be monumental­ly foolish not to realise this could ultimately pose a threat to us too.

And, regardless of our own selfintere­st, surely we can all agree that the loss of the Scottish wildcat, red squirrel and capercaill­ie – among the species most at risk in this country – would leave Scotland a considerab­ly poorer place.

These species are our elephants, our tigers, our gorillas. We should work hard to make sure they don’t become our Tasmanian tigers or our dodos.

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