{"id":53,"date":"2020-02-16T23:53:44","date_gmt":"2020-02-16T23:53:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/box5257.temp.domains\/~houghty5\/?p=53"},"modified":"2022-02-07T16:02:07","modified_gmt":"2022-02-07T21:02:07","slug":"dont-feed-the-animals","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thoughtsofstone.com\/dont-feed-the-animals\/","title":{"rendered":"DON’T FEED THE ANIMALS"},"content":{"rendered":"
Thoughts on conservation biology for humans<\/em><\/p>\n <\/p>\n ____________________________________________<\/p>\n \u201cDon\u2019t feed the animals\u201d is a concept I didn\u2019t really learn until late childhood, when I traveled one summer to Yellowstone with my family, and saw signs everywhere with that warning. It\u2019s a central concept of wildlife management in wilderness areas where humans intrude.<\/p>\n It\u2019s a counterintuitive concept, but a crucial one. Many and perhaps most people, especially when motivated by compassion, tend to assume there is no real harm in their feeding an individual elk or bison, particularly one that looks hungry. What wildlife managers know is that such feeding endangers not only the food-bearing humans but, more importantly, the local animal populations that are being fed. Uncontrolled feeding by humans of wild animals makes them dependent on that artificial food source, effectively reducing their adaptation to their wild environment even as their population balloons from the sudden nutrient abundance. It sets up the possibility of a crash of the animal population, perhaps to zero, due to an interruption of the artificial food supply, a nutrient deficiency caused by the new supply, or perhaps an infectious disease that takes advantage of the new density of hosts.<\/p>\n The key point, from a wildlife management or conservation biology perspective, is that doing what seems beneficial at the level of individual animals can, in the long-run, be utterly disastrous at the population level.<\/p>\n It’s the Population, Stupid<\/strong><\/p>\n Conservation biology is functionally akin to politics in the human realm. Both aim to manage populations of animals in their natural habitats, the big difference being that politics involves humans managing other humans, which obviously introduces many complications and complexities. When humans manage animal populations they are much more emotionally detached from their charges. They get no direct feedback or pushback from them. They focus on the goals that are most important and most objectively measurable. They would consider it absurd to promote \u201cequality\u201d among the individual animals in a given population, or to strive to eradicate harmful stereotypes, or to do away with patriarchal oppression, or to promote the civil liberties of animals that want to engage in homosexual activity, or to change their sexual identity, or to \u201cincrease the diversity\u201d of an animal population by mixing in other populations or subspecies from other habitats.<\/p>\n Conceivably if we could read animals\u2019 thoughts or emotions better than we can now, we would discern greater complexity in their lives and \u201ccultures.\u201d We would more routinely see animals as distinct individuals with individual needs. But for a conservation biologist, the overriding goals wouldn\u2019t change. Those goals center on the idea of conserving animal populations, as populations<\/em>, at natural, self-sustaining levels in harmony or equilibrium with the habitats for which they are evolutionarily adapted. Implicit here is the notion of an animal population as a distinct group with a distinct lineage and territory, and a relatively small inflow and outflow of genes from and to outsider groups. The survival of that population in its natural, wild state is the essential aim, compared to which the fleeting joys, sufferings and neuroses of individual animals are immaterial. In other words, the biologist \u201csees the forest, not the trees\u201d\u2014because the forest really is all that history will ever see.<\/p>\n Humans in the ancient world tended to think of themselves in similar terms: as members of distinct populations, extended families really, whose general health, prosperity, fertility\u2014above all, survival\u2014was the proper object of human politics and governance. Even if they focused on other cultural goals as well, they would have regarded an expanding or at least stable population as the ultimate measure of success. As Yahweh is quoted saying to Abraham in Genesis 22:17, \u201cI will multiply thy seed as the stars of the heaven, and as the sand which is upon the sea shore\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n A word here about diversity: Conservation biologists value it highly, but the diversity for which they aim is not the same as the \u201cdiversity\u201d that gets so much attention in the human political realm. Diversity in the lexicon of conservation biologists, or what is usually called \u201cbiodiversity,\u201d refers to a diversity of distinct, habitat-linked animal populations<\/em>, many of them representing different species or subspecies. It does not<\/em> refer to genetic diversity within an animal population. In fact, conservation biologists tend to view a large flow from one population into another, or from one habitat into another, as a negative outcome, a destroyer of biodiversity, i.e., an invasion or conquest\u2014thus the term \u201cinvasive species.\u201d<\/p>\n Free-Agent States<\/strong><\/p>\n Many people in the modern West, especially among the elites, prefer to see themselves as members of populations that are no longer like extended families of one ethnicity and culture. These post-traditional populations are more like modern sports teams, with flexible rosters of free agents whose attachments to the group are merely contractual.<\/p>\n