Always Trust Your Gut Extinct

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach, title from a Paula Abdul quote

The backstory for today’s adventure is that this is the first scientific question I seriously researched. It is also the reason I don’t trust the “experts” or the “consensus”. In 1988, E. O. Wilson, an ant expert with little knowledge of extinction, made a startling claim that extinction rates were through the roof. He claimed there was a “Sixth Wave” of extinctions going on, and that we were losing a huge amount, 2.7% of all the species per year. This claim quickly went viral and soon was believed by everyone. So back in 2003, a decade ago now, I researched the question, found that Wilson was wrong by orders of magnitude, wrote it up, sent it around to the journals to see if they would publish it,  and … well, let me just say that I was not received kindly. I was a voice crying in the wilderness. They didn’t give me a look-in, I was challenging the consensus. As far as I know, I was the only one saying that Emperor Wilson had no clothes … and as a result, I was not encouraged to continue publicizing my views.

But the world goes on, and three years ago I simplified and streamlined my work and published it as a post on WUWT entitled “Where Are The Corpses“. In it, I argued that there was no “Sixth Wave” of extinctions, that Wilson’s numbers were wildly exaggerated, and that current extinction rates (except in isolated islands and Australia) are not unusual in any way. Dr. Craig Loehle rewrote and developed the ideas, and he got it peer-reviewed and published in Diversity and Distributions, available here. Craig wrote about it in a post entitled “New paper from Loehle & Eschenbach shows extinction data has been wrongly blamed on climate change due to island species sensitivity“. Title says it all …

extinctions_birds_mammals_historicalFigure 1. Stacked graph of total historical bird and mammal extinctions by year. This charts of the spread of European species (foxes, cats, rabbits, dogs, humans, weeds, diseases, etc.) to Australia and the islands. The earliest extinctions are from the time Europeans arrived in the Caribbean. There is a second wave of exploration and settlement in the 1700s. Finally, the spread of empires in the 1800’s led to the peak rates around the turn of the last century. Since then, the rates have dropped.

Having written so early and so extensively to try to debunk the claims of massive extinction rates and the bogus “sixth wave of extinction” hyped by the alarmists,  I was pleased to receive a note from Anthony pointing out the publication of a new study in Science magazine (paywalled, naturally) entitled Can We Name Earth’s Species Before They Go Extinct? It’s gotten lots of media attention, mostly due to the fact that in the Abstract, they say that estimates of extinction rates are way overblown. My emphasis:

Some people despair that most species will go extinct before they are discovered. However, such worries result from overestimates of how many species may exist, beliefs that the expertise to describe species is decreasing, and alarmist estimates of extinction rates.

I must say, seeing that phrase “alarmist estimates of extinction rates” in Science made me smile, it was a huge vindication. However, I fear that they still have not grasped the nettle. I say that because at the end of the paper they say:

Conclusion

The estimates of how many species are on Earth (5 ± 3 million) are now more accurate than the moderate predictions of extinction rates (0.01 to 1% per decade). The latter suggest 500 to 50,000 extinctions per decade if there are 5 million species on Earth.

Why do I think that their conclusion is so badly flawed?

Like many modern scientists, rather than trying to find the most probable, they simply assume the worst. So they give their calculations assuming a 1% decadal extinction rate. Here’s the problem. That’s no more believable than Wilson’s 2.7% per decade rate. There are about 3,300 mammal species living on the continents (excluding Australia). If we assume that one percent of them go extinct per decade, that would mean that we should be seeing about 33 continental mammal extinctions per decade. It’s worse for birds, a 1% extinction rate for birds would be about 80 continental birds per decade. We have seen absolutely nothing even vaguely resembling that. That’s only slightly below Wilson’s estimate of a 2.7% extinction rate, and is still ridiculously high.

Instead of 33 mammals and 80 birds going extinct on the continents per decade, in the last 500 years on the great continental landmasses of the world, we’ve only seen three mammals and six birds go extinct. Only nine continental mammal and bird species are known to have gone extinct in 500 years. Three mammals and six birds in 500 years, that’s less than one continental mammal extinction per century, and these highly scientific folks are claiming that 30 mammals and 80 birds are going extinct per decade?  … once again I’m forced to ask, where are the corpses?

This kind of world-blindness astounds me. I’ve heard of living in an ivory tower, but if you were making the claim that it’s raining, wouldn’t you at least look out the ivory windows to see if water were actually falling from the sky? How can you seriously claim that we’re losing dozens and dozens of species per year when there is absolutely no sign of that in the records?

Because the reality is that despite humans cutting down the forests of the world at a rate of knots for hundreds and hundreds of years, despite clearcutting for lumber, despite slash-and-burn, despite conversions to cropland, despite building hundreds of thousands of miles of roads and fences, despite everything … only nine continental mammal and bird species have gone extinct.

That gives us actual, not theoretical but actual, estimates of the historical extinction rates for continental birds and animals. For continental mammals that works out to 3 extinctions per 3,300 continental mammal species per 50 decades equals 0.002% per decade, somewhat below their low estimate of 0.01% per decade. For birds, it’s 6 extinctions per 8000 continental species per 50 decades, which is only slightly lower. If we assume that we’ve missed four out of five of the historical extinctions, very unlikely but I suppose possible, it still works out to only about 0.01%.

So their very lowest estimate, that of an extinction rate of 0.01% per decade, turns out to be a maximum estimate of what we’ve seen on the continents over the last five centuries.

Now, this does not include the islands and Australia. Rates there have historically been quite high. But the high historical rates there, as shown above in Figure 1, are the result of what might be called “First Contact”—the first introduction of numbers of European plants, animals, and diseases to previously isolated areas. But in 2013, there are few islands on the planet that haven’t seen First Contact. As a result, the extinction rates on the islands and in Australia, while still higher than on the continents, are extremely unlikely to have another peak such as they had at First Contact.

Finally, let me say that the low extinction rates should not be any cause for complacency. What my studies have shown is that the real threat to mammal and bird species is not habitat reduction, as incorrectly claimed for the last couple decades. The real extinction threat to birds and mammals is now and always has been predation, either by humans, or by imported “alien” species, particularly on islands. Hunting by humans threatens bonobo chimpanzees and other primates, as well as tigers, rhinoceros, and other mammal and bird species. Hunting is the extinction threat, not habitat destruction, and always has been, whether the hunters were animals or humans.

CODA

People are always giving me grief about how I’m not getting with the picture, I’m not following the herd, I’m not kowtowing to the consensus. I have no problem doing that, particularly given my experience regarding extinctions. For years I was the only person I knew of who was making the claim that E. O. Wilson should have stuck to his ants and left extinctions alone. Wherever I looked scientists disagreed with my findings. I didn’t have one person I knew, or one person I read, who thought I was right. Heck, even now, a decade later, the nettle still hasn’t been grasped, people are just beginning to realize that they were fools to blindly believe Wilson, and to try to manage a graceful climb down from the positions they took.

What I learned in that episode was that my bad number detector works quite well, that I should stick to my guns if I think I’m right, and that I should never, ever, ever place any faith in the opinions of the experts. They were all wrong, every single last swingin’ Richard of them, and I was right. Doesn’t mean I’ll be right next time, I’ve been wrong plenty both before and since … but it has given me the courage to hold on to some extremely minority positions.

It is my strong belief that I will also be vindicated in my claim that the earth’s temperature is regulated, not by CO2, but by a host of interlocking and mutually supportive homeostatic mechanisms that maintain the temperature within a fairly narrow range … time will tell. In my opinion, the experts in the climate field have shown that they don’t know a whole lot more about the real underpinnings of the climate than E. O. Wilson knew about extinctions … but that’s just me, and YMMV.

The very finest of a lovely day to you all,

w.

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David Schofield
January 25, 2013 3:35 pm

Apparently all the British Isles mackerel as moved north to Iceland because of climate change and warmer seas particularly around the south west coast of Britain.
“Part of the problem would seem to be climate change, with mackerel seeking colder waters.”
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/aug/22/britain-iceland-faroe-islands-mackerel-war
However look at the official temps for a local south of England area near me, now apparently ‘devoid’ of mackerel;
3rd graph down shows that it has actually gotten cooler in the last 6 years!
http://www.cefas.defra.gov.uk/our-science/observing-and-modelling/monitoring-programmes/sea-temperature-and-salinity-trends/presentation-of-results/station-24-weymouth.aspx
So the mackerel either are responding to a 50 year trend or planning for the future. And another thing if they don’t like the average 13°C around here increasing to 13.5°C why do they all need to migrate to Iceland’s 8°C? wouldn’t they all just shift north by .5°C?

pat
January 25, 2013 3:44 pm

willis – it’s us sceptics who are not looking out “the window” & participating in the environment!!! LOL.
24 Jan: Vancouver Sun: Misty Harris: Exposure to conspiracy theories has dramatic consequences
Researchers from the University of Kent in the U.K. found that simply reading a conspiracy theory increased people’s feelings of powerlessness, which ultimately reduced their desire to politically engage. And this effect occurred even when the information wasn’t directly related to government.
Exposure to pro-conspiracy material on climate change, for example, not only made people less motivated to reduce their carbon footprint, it also negatively affected their interest in voting.
“When you’re exposed to a conspiracy – say, that the government is involved in secret plots – it can make you feel as though your actions won’t make a difference,” said doctoral student Daniel Jolley, the study’s co-author. “(It) appears to trigger a conspiratorial mindset.”…
Those who read the conspiratorial material were more likely to report feelings of climate powerlessness, uncertainty and disillusionment, which in turn reduced their desire to act in environmentally friendly ways…
But they also note that conspiracy theories potentially lead to societal disengagement – and, as their research shows, a waning interest in political and environmental participation.
“Conspiracy theories aren’t necessarily just harmless fun,” said Jolley. “They may have potentially serious social consequences.”…
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/national/Exposure+conspiracy+theories+dramatic+consequences/7866992/story.html
——————————————————————————–

January 25, 2013 4:04 pm

I thought, apparently erroneously, that Stephen Jay Gould had disputed E. O. Wilson’s assertion about species extinction, but I could not locate any statement to that effect in the literature in my library.
One interesting fact came out in that cursory search, though, was that twenty years ago, “British Museum entomologist Nigel E. Stork reports that the total number of formally named species of animals and plants (excluding the diverse kingdoms of fungi, bacteria, and other unicellular creatures) now stands at approximately 1.82 million…” of which more than half are insects [“A Special Fondness for Beetles” S. J. Gould].
Also, some entomologists estimated there to be close to 100 million species of animals and plants based on the known proportion of beetles to everything else. Reminds me of certain “facts” and “theories” sounded by various climate scientists.

En Passant
January 25, 2013 4:11 pm

A couple of years ago our local school hosted a presentation by a couple of senior school students on “Global Warming and the New Wave of Extinctions”. As it was a cold, wet night with nothing on TV I went along. Amazingly, about 100 people attended.
They rolled out every cliche and bad statistic ever heard and correlated cause and effect between totally unrelated facts, statistics, etc. The audience was appreciative and wept uncontrollably when told that 10,000 species had been ‘extincted’ by the 1 degree Centigrade increase already experienced. “We are doomed!” they wailed
During question time I asked:
1. Can you name two species declared extinct in the past 2-years? and
2. How many new species are being created each year, as opposed to being found?
One gentleman near the front cried ‘Shame!” and people started stamping their feet. The Moderator, a city councillor said “I think we can ignore that. Next?”
Yes, we are doomed, but not for the reasons they think … but because a new Dark Age of Unreason and Ignorance is upon us

DesertYote
January 25, 2013 4:23 pm

richard telford
January 25, 2013 at 12:54 pm
but gradually, perhaps over decades or centuries depending on the size of the remaining habitat.
###
BS. If it takes centuries for a species to expire, its not habitat reduction that did it.

January 25, 2013 4:35 pm

I wonder if E.O.Wilson would consider windmills to be ‘habitat destruction’?

DesertYote
January 25, 2013 4:36 pm

Because we can not define what a species is, we can’t define what extinction is, especially when Marxism gets involved.
1. So, did Canis lepophagus go extinct, or did it just change?
2. C. lupus ( a resent arrival) did not become extinct in the CONUS, despite protestations to the contrary, by Marxist propagandists trying to redefine language. The Grey Wolf was EXTIRPATED. (The extirpation of the c.lupus was not easy, but took considerable effort and resources to accomplish.)

Evan Jones
Editor
January 25, 2013 4:37 pm

Not so fast, Willis . . .
Despite having hundreds of sonar contacts over the years, the trail has since gone cold and Rines believes that Nessie may be dead, a victim of global warming.
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/veteran-loch-ness-monster-hunter-968694

richard telford
January 25, 2013 4:53 pm

Willis Eschenbach says:
January 25, 2013 at 1:48 pm
richard telford says:
January 25, 2013 at 12:54 pm
Habitat loss is a major factor in extinction dynamics, but two problems make this difficult to detect with simplistic analyses.
I note that you don’t supply a scrap of evidence for that claim, that habitat loss is a “major factor”. Not one corpse to back up your claims. On the continents we don’t have a record of one single species that was a forest obligate that has gone extinct, from habitat loss or any other reason. The reasonable conclusion is that it’s hard to drive animals extinct.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Just because you are blissfully unaware of the enormous literature on species extinction after habitat loss does not mean that habitat loss does not drive species to extinction. I know that you will argue that these are local extinctions rather than global extinctions but that is an irrelevant distinction. All extinctions are local, some just happen to be extinctions of the last remaining population.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
First is data quality – it is very difficult to prove a species is extinct. Just ask if the ivory-billed woodpecker is extinct – a large bird in an area with many ornithologists – imagine how much worse the data is in West Africa.
So what? Yes, it’s difficult, but the Red List and CREO both declare animals extinct without any problems.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I would have have hoped that this would be obvious: if it is difficult to tell if species are extinct, it is difficult to count how many are extinct. Sure some species are (almost) definitely extinct, and are listed as such in the redlist. But there are many species where the data is just not good enough to tell. Some are listed as data deficient, others are just not shown – look for example at Lepidoptera in sub-Saharan Africa. The redlist only lists 311 species, a small fraction of the total diversity.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The second problem is extinction debt. When an area of habitat is lost, we expect that the number of species that will survive in the remaining habitat will decline, but the species will not become extinct immediately, but gradually, perhaps over decades or centuries depending on the size of the remaining habitat.
Since we have been cutting down forests for hundreds of years, destroying forest habitat over huge acreages, and since Wilson made his prediction a quarter of a century ago, we have had more than enough time to demonstrate that your claim is doesn’t pencil out.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There is a considerable literature on extinction debt: experimental deforestation in Amazonia, microcosm experiments, observational evidence, and theoretical modelling. All this evidence shows that extinction debt is a real phenomenon at the patch scale. If it operates at the patch scale, it is impossible for it not to operate at the global scale.
The time scale of extinction debt in large fragments in centuries-long. Large-scale long-term clearance of the most species rich habitats, tropical rainforests, are a relatively recent phenomenon. Therefore much of the extinction debt has still to be paid.
I presume that since you are so sure that extinction debt does not affect your analysis that you have read at least some of this literature, and applied your gut instinct to determine how the well established concept of extinction debt is flawed. If you cannot be bothered to read any of the literature, at least read the Wikipedia page.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Here’s the problem, Richard. I went over the detailed numbers for this very idea in my post “Where Are The Corpses”, devoting about six paragraphs to showing why your claim falls over in the slightest breeze.
Now I know that “Post Normal Science” is all the rage, but even so, if you are going to discuss my work, don’t you think you should at least read it first?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Alas, I did read it. I believe I commented how weak the analysis was. You have done nothing to improve it and you appear not to care that you may be wrong.

trafamadore
January 25, 2013 4:57 pm

Based on the the Red List, more than 16,000 species of the world’s creatures are threatened with extinction, right now. The Red List is maintained by the Swiss-based World Conservation Union (IUCN) and it’s one of the gloomiest books in the world to most biologists, and, what with AGW, it is set to get even gloomier.
Willis, perhaps you should listen to our E.O.Wilson…the ant man, an evolutionist by trade…he knows allot more about extinction than you give him credit for. And certainly allot more than you.

Pamela Gray
January 25, 2013 5:05 pm

There’s Nessie who may be dead, but who cannot lay to rest without a tear the yellow throated pink toed, greenwinged, desert miniature grasshopper!?!?!?! It was a species that had not yet been discovered yet but went extinct before we could count it. And that is what Trenbreth would say if he knew about the yellow throated pink toed, greenwinged, desert minature grasshopper. We just didn’t know for sure it existed, but we thought we did, and now that we can’t find it, it must be counted as a missing grasshopper. Note to self: Must get grant from Gore to study missing grasshopper.

Pamela Gray
January 25, 2013 5:07 pm

trafamador, maybe you could allot time in your day to list what Wilson knows that Willis does not?

January 25, 2013 5:07 pm

OK, trafamadore. Name ten animal species that have officially become extinct in the past decade.
…Name five, then.
…Two?

Bob
January 25, 2013 5:18 pm

trafamadore, are you aware that 99.9999% of all species that ever existed on planet earth have gone extinct. It is called evolution. All normal, nothing to fret about.

January 25, 2013 5:20 pm

You too, Telford. Name those “extinct” species.

Jurgen
January 25, 2013 5:23 pm

Thanks for the article Willis. This for me is the second big scare thrown out of the window by WUWT, next to the climate scare. It is not I was overly concerned about species being lost, as this is happening all the time throughout natural history. And for sure in the future will happen to homo sapiens. But still I was misled by not knowing the real data.
Why is it people like to go for these scares, like mass extinction and climate catastrophe and what have you? I am speculating now, but I think in the end it is a way to evade our responsibilities.
I am not sure it is a deliberate ploy by politicians to cultivate these scares to camouflage the real problems they cannot deal with. These real problems of course are not in the realm of nature or mother earth but are purely social and political. Maybe it is on purpose with some politicians but I think it is a general tendency to evade our responsibilities we all have more or less, because it is no easy matter. Our failings in the social and political area are extremely painful and we rather not see them. If anything they are the direct result of our own actions and choices so we should be able to deal with them, right? But we hardly can, can we? So we rather avoid this painful fact and start looking elsewhere.
I am not advocating any political or ethical agenda here. Actually I am just stating that if there are real and serious issues to be solved, they lie overwhelmingly in the social and political arena, that is in our dealing with each other, and not in our dealing with nature.
So cultivating these big scares is a projection of our social and political failures onto the scenery of nature. We don’t want to see “enlightened man” to fail so we rather see nature fail. But the scare “nature goes wrong” actually deep down is a scare we go wrong ourselves. IMHO.
I guess it is a price we have to pay in our age of “lost certainties”. Kind of a panic reaction. A mass panic is a real phenomena, like a stampede, and it can wreak havoc. And we humans are social animals, aren’t we? So sometimes we also stampede and may act completely lunatic, like with this CO2 nonsense. But luckily also it is a temporary something. It will go over. My “history model” tells me.
OK I hope this makes some sense. It is speculative stuff I know, but then, my gut feeling tells me so 😉

trafamadore
January 25, 2013 5:26 pm

D.B. Stealey says: “OK, trafamadore. Name ten animal species that have officially become extinct in the past decade.”
These were documented in the last ten years as extinct, although who knows when the last of each species died. They are just from one genus of frogs:
Philautus dimbullae
Philautus eximius
Philautus extirpo
Philautus halyi
Philautus hypomelas
Philautus leucorhinus
Philautus maia
Philautus malcolmsmithi
Philautus nanus
Philautus nasutus
Philautus oxyrhynchus
Philautus pardus
Philautus rugatus
Philautus stellatus
So think about it, each of these species is gone forever. Forever. Like the dinosaurs. Our children will never see them. Never. They might as well be the dinosaurs, except we know what color their skin was and that they didnt have feathers….

trafamadore
January 25, 2013 5:32 pm

Bob says: “trafamadore, are you aware that 99.9999% of all species that ever existed on planet earth have gone extinct. ”
Yep. But tell me, Mr. Asteroid, what does that have to do with senselessly causing extinction?

January 25, 2013 5:32 pm

Ya know, trafamadore, just like Willis, I pay attention to what I write:
Name ten animal species…
Still waiting.

Craig Loehle
January 25, 2013 5:38 pm

Ironically, Nigel Stork was one of the reviewers of my paper with Willis–He sent me a note after it was accepted so it is not a secret. He recommended publication. So he knows about our work showing that continental extinctions are low. Yet no mention of this in the Science paper, nor a citation.

voice in my head
January 25, 2013 5:44 pm

I rather being worried about the explosive amount of new species discovered last few years, and the relation with rainforest being cut away.
Any species not found yet is another forest still alive..

January 25, 2013 5:44 pm

I remember your original article well. It was one of the reasons I kept coming back to WUWT. I thought bravo at the time. I think you may well be right about Earth’s temperature regulation, too. However, I think your “Always Trust Your Gut” article title is a bit misleading. You were a man of the sea and land with much practical (and probably uncommonly good) judgment. I think your informed judgment (despite lack of specific training in biology and ecology) and not your gut made you wince when you saw those O. Wilson extinction predictions. I had the same gut wrenching, I admit, experience when I first saw the Hockey Stick, since I have been a weather wonk and follower of climate my whole life, without specific training. Some others, without experience and/or good judgment, have gut wrenching experiences that result in what normally passes from the gut (perhaps with a bull in front). So experience outside the ivory tower is very helpful! I actually have academic (and much more practical experience) in biology and ecology, so I congratulate you on your insights that were missed by the so-called experts. I do take issue with your species extinction attribution- there’s that word again! Of course, there have been many reasons for the extinction of well over 99% of the species that have ever lived, from the four or five mass extinctions from catastrophic events to the over hunting (over harvesting) of the Passenger Pigeon. Habitat degradation, destruction, and fragmentation were most likely not the reason for the majority of past extinctions excepting those cataclysmic events. Today, I would argue, they probably are, or, at least, will be in the future. One example. The northern hemisphere migratory bird species that winter in tropical forest are threatened, with many populations of warblers, vireos, and other species, including their predators and the tropical flora, because tropical forests are increasing being replaced by ranch land grasses, monoculture agriculture, and, most ironically and tragically, palm plantations for palm oil. There’s no immediate or catastrophic threat, and mankind can probably survive OK without tropical forests and the biodiversity they contain. For me, the warblers and orioles and Broad-winged hawks and all the others are like Shakespeare or music. We can probably survive OK without them, but do we want to?

January 25, 2013 5:46 pm

Another factor in extinctions not yet mentioned is competition from introduced species. An example is the N American grey squirrel rapidly displaced the native red squirrel across much of Britain.
Which leads me into an anecdote about how small an area of habitat a species needs to survive, at least in the short term.
When I was a teenager, I was hospitalized for an appendicitus. I was on the third floor of a U-shaped block and between the 2 wings of the U were 5 or 6 pinetrees. So I could see close up the squirrels running around in the trees. Surprisingly, they were red squirrels.
I spent my childhood exploring the woods in the area and they were full of grey squirrels, but I had never seen a red squirrel before. Yet a few had managed to survive on those 5 or 6 trees.

trafamadore
January 25, 2013 5:46 pm

D.B. Stealey says: “Ya know, trafamadore, just like Willis, I pay attention to what I write: Name ten animal species…Still waiting.”
Hum. So are you like one of the poor students I haf to teach? So a frog is not a plant or a bacteria. So you are left with only a few possibilities…can you name them? Impress me.

dp
January 25, 2013 5:54 pm

Swingin’ Richard – now there’s a keeper.
Great post, Willis, well punctuated.