The wild attempts to save the environment
My spell-check program doesn’t recognize the word “Anthropocene,” underlining it in red, as if it’s a typo to be cleaned up and not a geological epoch to be grappled with.
The term refers to how humans have been so successful at changing the environment that we have become the dominant influence on the natural world. According to Elizabeth Kolbert’s new book, “Under a White Sky: The Nature of the Future” (234 pages, Crown, $28), how we proceed is, in one sense, full of possibility, a test of our technological ingenuity and derring-do, but it also happens to be grimly determined in one irrevocable way. Leaving the natural world to repair itself isn’t an option anymore — or, at least, it’s not an acceptable one, considering the death and suffering that would inevitably ensue.
It’s as if we’re living through an enormous trolley problem:
Do nothing, and the runaway trolley will kill billions of people; or pull the lever and shunt the trolley to another track, where it will kill millions. Or maybe pulling the lever will cause the trolley to burst into flames and wreak all kinds of destruction that we hadn’t even considered before.
Our current predicament is the consequence not only of environmental exploitation — though there’s plenty of that. One of the ironies of the Anthropocene is how often humans have set out to solve one ecological problem only to invite a new one.
Kolbert opens her book with a section on the continual attempts to control the proliferation of Asian carp, a fish that was originally introduced to American waterways in 1963, a year after the publication of Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring.” At the time, Americans were concerned about chemicals in the water, and the carp were supposed to offer a nontoxic way to keep aquatic weeds in check. But these carp also happen to be voracious feeders that, as Kolbert puts it, “outcompete the native fish until they’re practically all that’s left.”
“Asian carp are a very good invasive species,” an engineer tells Kolbert. “Well, not ‘good’ — they’re good at being invasive.” It’s a slip that captures the stakes uncannily well. It also suggests how Asian carp are, in one fundamental way, kindred species to our own.
As Kolbert showed in her previous book, the Pulitzer Prizewinning “The Sixth Extinction,” humans can thrive in different environments, outcompeting other species and/or destroying whatever doesn’t suit us. From one vantage point (ours), we are “good”; from another, we are a catastrophe. Reading Kolbert, I was reminded of William Gass’s novel “Middle C,” in which the apocalyptically minded protagonist keeps rewriting a version of the same sentence over and over:
“The fear that the human race might not survive has been replaced by the fear that it will endure.”
Kolbert is a writer for the New Yorker, where parts of this book originally appeared. Her narrative voice is steady and restrained — the better, it sometimes seems, to allow an unadorned reality to show through, its contours unimpeded by frantic alarmism or baroque turns of phrase. The people she meets are trying to reverse the course of manmade environmental disaster, whether that might involve electrifying a river, shooting diamond dust into the stratosphere or genetically modifying a species to extinction. She says that the “strongest argument” in favor of some of the most fantastical sounding measures tends to be a sober realism: “What’s the alternative?”
One of the ironies of the Anthropocene is how often humans have set out to solve one ecological problem only to invite a new one.
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