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The Intersection
« Off to Houston, D.C.
Webcast of Rice University Unscientific America Talk »

So What Does The Red List “Do”?

by Sheril Kirshenbaum

This is the fourth in a series of guest posts by Joel Barkan, a previous contributor to “The Intersection” and a graduate student at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The renowned Scripps marine biologist Jeremy Jackson is teaching his famed “Marine Science, Economics, and Policy” course for what may be the last time this year (along with Jennifer Jacquet), and Joel will be reporting each week on the contents of the course.

“Find a CITES, find myself a CITES to live in.” Isn’t that how the Talking Heads song goes?  No?  Either way, I had the tune stuck in my head all afternoon during our most recent class, in which we discussed the merits of listing species on both the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) and the IUCN’s Red List of Threatened Species.  The student presentations covered the listing criteria and some of the problems associated with both groups.  CITES has successfully impeded illegal trade of tropical reptiles and amphibians, but it lacks the same influence with marine species.  For instance, China removed itself from the CITES treaty and freely imports dead seahorses, which are used for traditional medicinal purposes.

Many students seemed puzzled by the role of CITES and the Red List.  What exactly are we trying to accomplish by making lists of animals that are in really, really big trouble?  Adding a doomed species to a list of other species that aren’t doing so hot doesn’t magically solve the problem, as one student pointed out during our discussion.  I came away frustrated at the IUCN’s unwillingness to stand up for the species it so painstakingly evaluates.  Each species on the Red List receives a thorough population analysis by groups of unbiased scientists.  The product is a detail-rich compilation of thousands of species—some critically endangered, some vulnerable, all meticulously calculated by the IUCN.

So what does the Red List do?  You tell me.  When I visited the San Diego Zoo a few weeks ago, I read the Red List status of every animal I saw, from the Komodo Dragon (Vulnerable) to the Harpy Eagle (Near Threatened).  It’s a wealth of information, sitting on the internet, on dusty library shelves, on sun-bleached zoo placards.  The Red List prides itself on its objectivity.  It doesn’t want to ruffle any feathers.  I think it needs to be subjective.  It needs to stick its neck out and make assertive policy recommendations based on its research.  I’m sure policy-makers use information from the Red List when making decisions, but the IUCN’s own voice would be welcomed and respected; after all, they did all the grunt work.  It’s one thing to make a list—I used to make one every December for Santa.  It’s another thing to use your hard work to help make difficult decisions that could lead to important changes.

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February 5th, 2010 1:25 PM Tags: joel barken
in Conservation, Culture, Education | 2 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

2 Responses to “So What Does The Red List “Do”?”

  1. 1.   Marion Delgado Says:
    February 6th, 2010 at 11:54 pm

    By the way, Tom Philpott at grist, in his beyond excellent review of Michael Specter’s Denialism, speaks for a good many environmentalists. He explains why we do not feel well-served by the skeptic community – which has to a considerable extent decided it’s identical to the cyberlibertarian community and which tries to, frankly, sneak unscientific ideas, some of them quite harmful, on board “skepticism” as a Trojan Horse.

    http://www.grist.org/article/2009-10-31-michael-specter-denialism-organic-GMO/

    Don’t be fooled by the URL, because the review runs through the entire book and points out all the unreasonable positions masquerading as representing science. Specter is a poster boy for people who simply want a break where they “smash” environmentalism and push their own free market ideology and see their alleged role of defending science as a handy club, instead of a goal in and of itself.

    The only thing I would add is that it should confound the libertarian partisans that communist Cuba is one of the biggest boosters of pulling out the stops on artificial life, genetic engineering, cloning, GMOs, etc. both in research and application. The equation of the precautionary principle with unscientific socialism is simply a canard.

  2. 2.   Marion Delgado Says:
    February 6th, 2010 at 11:57 pm

    The reason I think the above is germane is that there’s nothing precisely in the Red List that tells you you should not let species go extinct, or that you should. It’s not normative, and science is not generally, though scientists can take normative value out of science.





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