Skip to content Skip to navigation

World Wildlife Day: Heat On Survival

Today is World Wildlife Day, designated so by the United Nations General Assembly on 20th December 2013, marking the day when the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) was adopted back in the year 1973. So, every year, March 3 is the day we humans have dedicated to celebrate the birds and animals that share this planet with us, the same creatures whose lives are largely endangered by the reckless pursuit of our development goals. With the world in the midst of a mass extinction event, with more than 24,000 species at the risk of extinction, the challenge for wildlife is clearly, is whether they can overcome the heat on survival.

In September 2016, Parties to CITES adopted a resolution on ‘Youth Engagement’, calling for greater engagement and empowerment of youth in conservation issues and decided to observe World Wildlife Day 2017 with the theme ‘Listen to the Young Voices.’ The aim is to encourage young people, as the future leaders and decision makers of the world, to act at both local and global levels to protect endangered wildlife. The survival of several iconic megafauna as well as lesser species that are vital to the natural ecosystems now depends on the future generations.

The earth has seen relatively stable climate for the last 10,000 years and all life forms have evolved to exist within certain temperature ranges. Abrupt rise in temperatures has made it impossible for wildlife to adapt to the change in their living environment; unlike the past periods of gradual change on Earth, fragmented and isolated wildlife habitats make it impossible for large scale natural migration. To estimate the effect of climate change on species, scientists use what they call a climatic envelope (sometimes also referred to as a bioclimatic envelope), which is the range of temperatures, rainfall and other climate-related parameters in which a species currently exists.

We live in the age of the Anthropocene, and it is now well established that human influence on the environment is already disrupting life on our planet, resulting in the extinction of about a quarter of all land species by the year 2050. Another report has claimed that the total number of wild animals are likely to decrease by two-thirds by the year 2020, in comparison to their numbers in 1970. Up to 50% of all amphibian species, which have been on Earth for over 250 million years and survived the extinction of the dinosaurs, could be lost this century.

The biodiversity of the oceans is also at great risk from climate change and marine vertebrate populations have declined by nearly fifty percent in the last four decades. The year 2016 was particularly bad for coral reefs around the world and warming ocean waters combined with an unusually long El Niño left a trail of dying and dead reefs.

Climate change is causing dramatic and significant impacts at the polar regions where the warming is accelerated by a combination of factors. The rapid reduction of krill populations, the primary food source for many marine species, is attributed to a combination of climate change and rise of UV radiation due to the depletion of the ozone layer. Warmer ocean temperatures and melting sea ice in the Arctic and Antarctic feeding grounds may jeopardize the ecology and migration pattern of many whale species. Marine mammals like the Polar Bear, Walrus, Bearded seal, and Ringed seal are especially vulnerable due to their reliance on sea ice. Antarctic species are dramatically impacted by alterations in the climatic conditions. Krill often feed on algae underneath sea ice and Antarctic krill populations have declined around the West Antarctic Peninsula with sea ice decrease.

Besides providing oxygen and sequestering carbon dioxide, planktons are the foundation for the entire oceanic food chain. In recent years, there has been a catastrophic collapse of phytoplankton and zooplankton populations due to warmer surface temperatures, ocean acidification, pollution and surprisingly, the rapid decline of whales. Whales are the primary species that fertilize the phytoplankton; one Blue Whale defecates three tons of nitrogen and iron-rich faeces a day, providing nutrients to the phytoplankton. In return the phytoplankton feed the zooplankton, the fishes and ultimately everything that lives in the sea.

Bees are the most important group of pollinators for farming and wild plants and the fertility of most flowering plants, including nearly all fruits and vegetables are dependent on them. But populations are declining due to a variety of factors including human development, pesticides, disease and a changing climate. Climate change is also affecting pollination by disrupting the synchronized timing of flower blooming and the timing at which bees pollinate. Flowers are blooming earlier in the growing season due to rising temperatures, before many bees have a chance at pollinating the plants Since 1992, when the landmark Convention on Biological Diversity was ratified, an additional 450 million hectares of nature habitat has been destroyed. Anthropogenic conversion of natural habitats is the greatest threat to biodiversity and one of the primary reasons for establishing protected areas. Yet, almost half of the world’s 800 Ecoregions, places with distinctive animal and plant communities are classified as very “high risk”, with destruction of the Ecoregion being 25 times greater in extent than existing protected areas. And 41 Ecoregions are in "crisis" -- losing habitat so rapidly that there is little left to protect.

Rising sea levels and salinization will also impact coastal mangroves and wetlands, home to numerous birds and animals. The Royal Bengal Tigers of the Sundarbans will be affected by the flooding of the mangroves; the lack of alternative suitable habitats for them to migrate make them especially vulnerable to climate change impacts. Other tiger habitats are vulnerable too; changes in rainfall pattern and decrease in soil moisture could increase tree mortality in the deciduous forest habitat and trigger a shift towards open tropical dry forests, which are considered to be less productive for tigers.

Precipitation changes could directly impact the habitat of other charismatic megafauna. The Indian One-horned Rhinoceros thrives in the grassland habitat sustained by abundant rainfall during the annual monsoons. Change in precipitation in the floodplains of Indian and Nepal could cause extreme flood or drought conditions when displaced rhinos are at a greater risk of being poached. Similarly, change in rainfall patterns and the availability of fodder could force Asiatic Elephants to stray, increasing conflict situations.

Scientists have described numerous examples of trophic cascades in marine and terrestrial ecosystems which demonstrates the consequences of taking out one species, for e.g., a mammal or a predator, from the food chain. In the long run the projected extinction of species will disrupt the web of life and create unforeseen challenges. New research has underscored the influence of humanity in transforming the planet, with scientists finding that over 50% of the world’s land area is now dominated by human activity, with 9% of this change happening in the last 25 years alone. Will we survive the current mass extinction and will we be celebrating World Wildlife Day in another half a century? The youth of today own the future and we will have to listen to the young voices to find the answer.

Add new comment

Random Stories

Seal Indo-Bnagla border by Mar 31;AASU to govt

25 Mar 2008 - 11:30pm | editor
The All Assam Students Union has served the March 31 ulimatum for the Government to seal the porous Indo-Bangla border. This was disclosed by AASU central leaders while they were staging the ten hour...

Naga peace: road ahead still uncertain

7 Mar 2016 - 12:53pm | AT News
By Sanjb Baruah If I were a Facebook user I would have surely clicked ‘like’ on the news that the Nationalist Socialist Council of Nagalim (Issak-Muivah) and the Government of India have reached a...

Waiting for Beijing's response

13 Dec 2017 - 7:19am | AT News
NEW DELHI: Chief minister Sarbanabda Sonowal had urged prime minister Narendra Modi to take up the Brahmaputra issue with Beijing where the mighty river that originates in Tibet now keeps flowing...

Rahul to appear before Guwahati court

28 Sep 2016 - 1:36pm | AT News
Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi is all set to appear before a lower court in Guwahati on Thursday in connection with a defamation case pending against him. The Nehru-Gandhi scion will be...

Other Contents by Author

Today is World Wildlife Day, designated so by the United Nations General Assembly on 20th December 2013, marking the day when the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) was adopted back in the year 1973. So, every year, March 3 is the day we humans have dedicated to celebrate the birds and animals that share this planet with us, the same creatures whose lives are largely endangered by the reckless pursuit of our development goals. With the world in the midst of a mass extinction event, with more than 24,000 species at the risk of extinction, the challenge for wildlife is clearly, is whether they can overcome the heat on survival.In September...
The 2nd of February is World Wetlands Day and marks the day of adoption of the historic Convention on Wetlands in 1971. Also known as the Ramsar Convention, after the Iranian city where it was inked, the intergovernmental treaty provides a framework for international cooperation for the conservation and wise use of wetlands and their resources.The Ramsar Convention definition of wetlands includes lakes, rivers, underground aquifers, swamps, marshes, peatlands, deltas, tidal flats, mangroves, coastal areas, coral reefs, and manmade ponds, reservoirs, salt pans, etc. Wetlands provide globally significant social, economic and environmental benefits. Important wetland functions include water...
The euphoria over the Paris Agreement coming into force on the 4th of November 2016 was short-lived, with the results of the US elections evoking widespread consternation 5 days later. The historic climate agreement being among the fastest international agreements ever to be ratified and come into force, and a President-Elect who has threatened to pull the world’s most powerful country out of it, must rank as the most dramatic shift from hope to despair among the environmentally conscious denizens on earth. This was to be a year of great hope driven by astute political leadership, undone by the whimsical outcome of an election that everyone took for granted.   The year 2016 began...
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change - Conference of the Parties (COP22) recently concluded at Marrakech, Morocco. It was held concurrently with the first session of the Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement (CMA 1) and the twelfth session of the Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP 12) from 7th to the 18th of November. Held amidst the background of a United States pull-out under President-elect Donald Trump, the Marrakech Climate Change Conference reaffirmed the commitment of countries for the quick implementation of the historic Paris Agreement. The big takeaways...
Today represents a new dawn in the history of mankind. Future generations will remember 4th November 2016 as the day the Paris Agreement came into force. The threat of climate change has never been more urgent, but the way forward has never been clearer with the historic climate agreement being among the fastest international agreements ever to be ratified and come into force. Expectedly, all the dates associated with the Paris Agreement will be remembered for eternity as the decisive moments when the global community decided to bring back the planet from the brink.The path was paved exactly a month back when the European Union overcame procedural hurdles to join the agreement and ensured...
A King Cobra measuring about 12 feet was rescued after it wandered into a residence at No. 2 Line, Jiajuri, Nagaon on Wednesday. Green Guard Nature Organization rescue specialist Dulu Bora was informed by one Deben Nayak from the village who requested him to rush to prevent frightened villagers from killing the snake. Fortunately most people in the area have been sensitized and they waited for Dulu Bora to arrive and safely remove the snake from the village. It was later released back to the wilderness at Bagheghati, close to the Swang R.F., in the presence of forest staff from the Chapanala Beat Office, Nagaon. This is the 8th King Cobra, the world's largest venomous snake, to have been...
The 5th World Elephant Day was observed today at Nagaon, Assam, with an elephant fodder plantation program and an art and terracotta competition. In the morning, 78 saplings of Bheem Kol, a giant banana species relished by elephants, were planted at the Karbi foothills elephant corridor near Lungsung by a Green Guard team including Dulu Bora,Satyam Nayak, Sanjay Nayak and others. In the afternoon, 30 students of the Chitralekha Chitrankon Vidyalaya at Chapanala, led by art teacher Jyotika Bhuyan, participated in a drawing and terracotta sculpture competition. Prizes were distributed to all the winners and participants. Green Guard Nature Organization has been organizing such events along...
A surrender ceremony was organized at Baanhkucha, Kothaguri, Nagaon on June 13, where 35 hunters and trappers from nearby villages of Lungsung, Jharugaon, Baanhkucha and Kothalguri villages vowed to stop the hunting of wild birds and animals. They also deposited several bows, arrows, catapults, machetes (daos) and spears before the gaonburah Babu Singh (village headman) of Jharugaon. The surrendered hunters were gifted a mosquito net each by members of Green Guard Nature Organization. The hunters, who used to operate in the Karbi foothills, confessed that they would often kill deer, pheasants, pangolins, hoolock gibbons, and any other birds and animals they could find for bush meat. They...
The World Environment Day was observed centrally by the Pollution Control Board & the forest department in collaboration with Green Guard Nature Organization at the Kamala Devi Todi Smriti Bhawan, Nagaon. Green Guard Nature Organization  Secretary General Rituraj Phukan was the main Resource Person and delivered the keynote address with an audio-visual presentation on the WED 2016 Theme 'Go Wild For Life - Fight against the Illegal Trade in Wildlife'.  Chief Guest & Nagaon MLA Mr. Rupak Sarmah, Nagaon MLA Mr. Rupak Sarmah spoke at length on the importance of environmental protection and the commitment of the new Assam government towards a pollution free environment. Nagaon...
The Guwahati Tiger Fest was organized at the Royal Global School to coincide with Earth Day 2016. The Tiger Fest was the culmination of the Sanctuary Asia Aircel Kids For Tigers programme for the year 2015-16 at Guwahati. Hundreds of students from various city schools were enraptured by an audio-visual presentation by Sanctuary Asia Founder Editor Bittu Sahgal. Dance, drama, songs, face painting, wall painting, fancy dress, art installation, wildlife photo exhibition, poster making, tree plantation, were among the activities organized in a festive ambience. A Teachers Environmental Leadership Workshop was also organized at the sidelines with presentations by NEHU Research Scholar Debajit...