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What is Natural?: Coral Reef Crisis Book
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Amazon Review
Students of marine biology have long been fascinated by the superorganisms called coral reefs, formed over thousands of years from skeletal remains and other matter. Many of those students have warned for several decades that these uncommon reefs are endangered by human development. Now, historian of science Jan Sapp writes, they are faced with another, paradoxical threat: the accelerating destruction of reefs by a creature called Acanthaster planci, the crown-of-thorns starfish. These starfish were a rarity when they were first observed off the coast of Australia in the late 1950s. Since that time their population has blossomed, with some scientists debating the cause but linking it at one time or another to familiar troublemakers, including global warming, overfishing, pesticide use, and atomic testing. Still other reputable scientists, Sapp writes, have dismissed the crown-of-thorns controversy as a hoax, claiming that most coral reefs are in no danger. "Facts, theories, values, and politics were so entangled in the controversy that it was often as difficult for us to separate them as it was for scientists to separate anthropogenic from natural change," he notes. Among the points in the debate that he finds most interesting is this: What happens when a natural predator threatens an already endangered species or habitat? The answers that he suggests are far from definitive, but they open up a discussion that will become increasingly important as more and more ecosystems require protection. --Gregory McNamee
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Product Description
During the late 1960s and 1970s, massive herds of poisonous crown-of-thorns starfish suddenly began to infest coral reef communities around the world, leaving in their wake devastation comparable to a burnt-out rainforest. In What is Natural?, Jan Sapp both examines this ecological catastrophe and captures the intense debate among scientists about what caused the crisis, and how it should be handled.
The crown-of-thorns story takes readers on tropical expeditions around the world, and into both marine laboratories and government committees, where scientists rigorously search for answers to the many profound questions surrounding this event. Were these fierce starfish outbreaks the kind of manmade disaster heralded by such environmentalists as Rachel Carson in Silent Spring? Indeed, discussions of the cause of the starfish plagues have involved virtually every environmental issue of our timeover-fishing, pesticide use, atomic testing, rain forest depletion, and over-populationbut many marine biologists maintain that the epidemic is a natural feature of coral-reef life, an ecological "balance of nature" that should not to be tampered with until we know the scientific truth of the crisis. But should we search for the scientific truth before taking action? And what if an environmental emergency cannot wait for a rigorous scientific search for "the truth?" The starfish plagues are arguably one of most mysterious ecological phenomena of this century. Through the window of this singlular event, What is Natural lucidly illustrates the complexity of environmental issues while probing the most fundamental questions about the relationship between man and nature.
- 0195123646
- 9780195123647
- Jan Sapp
- 10 June 1999
- OUP USA
- Hardcover (Book)
- 304
- First Edition
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