| The Ultimate Exotic Weed
In my first botany course, I learned that a “weed” is a
plant out of place. Some plants and animals that have been introduced,
either intentionally or accidentally from somewhere else, are called
“exotic”- not naturally found there. They can also be serious
pests or “weeds” that invade our environment. An invasive
exotic pest species is one that spreads naturally in natural or semi
natural habitats, displacing native species, and to producing a significant
change in composition, structure, or natural processes such as fire
and water flow. Usually, an invasive species is self-sustaining and
expands into populations within communities where they were not previously
associated.
In Florida we have numerous exotics, but the most notable are Brazilian
pepper, Australian pines, melaleuca and many vines. There are also numerous
animals, for example, cattle egrets, Asian clams, Asian tiger mosquito,
and many insects.
Our Earth is estimated to be 4.5 billion years old. Only recently,
just 1.7 million years ago, one exotic species evolved in Africa, and
began to spread into Europe and Asia. It crossed the Bering Strait only
15,000 years ago and within a few thousand years came down into Florida.
During the last hundred years, it has become quite a dominant pest affecting
the water supply, devastating beach communities, drying up wetlands,
polluting lakes, oceans, and soils, daming and canalizing rivers, removing
forests, degrading air, causing global warming, and eliminating numerous
plant and animal species that have not even been described or named
or even put on the endangered lists. It has eliminated all
of its predators and is only subjected to a few viral, bacterial and
parasitic diseases. It is now found in every continent and nearly every
habitat including space and the Moon. There are now over six and half
billion individuals with many of them starving and competing with each
other even to death but still reproducing and living longer and longer.
This species is even thinking of going to Mars to live, probably as
a back up in case things really get out of control here.
Some hope and pray that this “exotic” will soon realize
that it is a living species together with others on the planet and will
learn to play by the natural rules that define how to live in balance
with other species. This means this exotic would have to address “Sustainability.”
Our region and even the world will someday reach a limit of space and
resources available for us. Sustainability from a scientist’s
view means the carrying capacity of our environment. In ecological terms,
the carrying capacity of an ecosystem is the size of the population
or community that can be supported or sustained indefinitely upon the
available resources and services of that ecosystem. Living within the
limits of an ecosystem depends on three factors:
· the amount of resources available in the ecosystem;
· the size of the population or community; and
· the amount of resources each individual within the community
consumes.
The concept of carrying capacity is closely related to the idea of "capital",
which fortunately many individuals of this species understand. The term
"capital" is most commonly used to refer to money and material
goods. However, in the context of sustainability, human communities
have several different types of capital that need to be considered -
natural, human, social, and built capital. Together, these types of
capital are referred to as community capital. All four types of capital
are necessary for communities to function. All four types of capital
need to be managed by a community. All four types of capital need to
be cared for, nurtured and improved over time. A community that is living
off the interest of its community capital is living within the carrying
capacity. A community that is degrading or destroying the ecosystem
on which it depends is using up its community capital and is living
unsustainably.
Carrying capacity is much harder to measure for human, social and built
capital than for natural capital but the basic concept is the same -
are the different types of capital being used up faster than they are
being replenished? A community that allows its children and adults to
be poorly educated, undernourished, and poorly housed is eroding its
human capital. We need opportunities for rewarding work, healthy recreation,
creative arts, physical and mental exercise, and entertainment. Gated
communities that allow the quality of its social interactions to decline
through lack of trust, respect, and tolerance is eroding our social
capital. A city or county that allows its buildings, roads, parks, power
facilities, water facilities, and waste processing capability to decay
is eroding its built capital. In addition, city or county that allows
its agriculture to disappear into high-density subdivisions, losses
it ability to independently feed and clothe itself and then must rely
on others to satisfy these survival needs.
As human beings, we need to control our population size, as our resources
are finite even though our appetite is not. Otherwise, there is not
room for fulfilling a new vision of striving for human greatness, the
creativity and outstanding achievements that our culture could nurture.
We will be so caught up with trying to handle all the problems that
overpopulation will have that we will not be able to do better than
we are. We will be lucky to just hold our own. Our environmental quality
is in danger of being not only eroded but becoming toxic to all living
beings.
Hopefully, we will not be the ultimate exotic weed.
Richard Baker, President
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