Biodiversity

Becoming Earth

If you’re an inquisitive, persistently curious, and talented communicator wanting to write a book on how life on Earth began, evolved and is being impacted by human activities, you might synthesize hundreds of science articles, interview many people, and adventure around the world depending on your time and budget. You could obtain grants and fellowships along with publishing a series of articles in popular magazines. Since you're also considering human impacts, you’d want to purchase carbon offsets to mitigate travel emissions. There’s the technical craft as well as the business side of producing a book involving dozens of people to check facts, review, edit, prepare illustrations, and engage in marketing, sales, and distribution in multiple languages.

Ferris Jabr spent 10 years compiling over 300 publications and traveling extensively worldwide to meet famous and obscure scientists to immerse himself in natural science research. He donated a part of his book advance to environmental groups including the Indigenous Environmental Network, Coalition for Rainforest Nations, Clean Air Task Force, and Carbon180.

He explored a mile-deep former gold mine in South Dakota to collect million-year old microbes, including the original one-celled bacterial inhabitants, pioneers in surviving harsh environmental conditions without air and light, capable of carving caverns, concentrating metals, and regulating the global cycling of carbon and nutrients.

On the Arctic’s Wrangel Island, he observed how reintroducing large mammals can restore the ecological balance by consuming grasslands, providing nutrient-rich dung, reducing melting permafrost and ultimately cooling the planet. He saw a graveyard of extinct mammoths and ancestors of bison, lions, elk, and rhinoceros with remains not petrified but frozen after tens of thousands of years.

He collected diverse plankton species in Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island to understand how these photosynthetic consumers of carbon dioxide produce oxygen and provide food to larger consumers from the smallest fish larvae to largest whales. Two categories of “free-swimming” plankton evolved, plant-like phytoplankton and animal-like zooplankton with some species possessing characteristics of both. Single-celled algae diatoms contain silica dioxide and coccolithophores use calcium carbonate for structure formed the White Cliffs of Dover, England. Entire ecosystems are dependent on consuming plankton with it’s 16:1 ratio of nitrogen to phosphorous maintains the same ratio in seawater. One drop of seawater may contain tens of thousands of microscopic plankton!

Ferris went scuba diving near Santa Catalina Island, 22 miles off the California coast, to swim in a giant kelp forest that can grow at the rate of 3 feet per day and provide storm-proof habitat to approximately 150 fish species. This experience led him to a kelp-oyster farm operated by Running Tides in Portland, Maine. They are experimenting with growing and floating kelp to remove carbon from the atmosphere and deposit carbon in the seafloor. Sea kelp are more significant photosynthesizers than terrestrial forests due to the size of the oceans.

He nervously climbed the 1066 foot Amazon Tall Tower Observatory in Brazil to observe the rainforest canopy and collect air samples. He learned how trees release substances into the air that seed clouds to generate rain with about half of the rainfall transpired from the rainforest at the rate of 20 billion tons of water per day! This self-generating process must be factored into our concepts of the hydrologic cycle where evaporation typically comes from the oceans to provide rain and snow. Amazon rainforests also contribute precipitation to the western and midwestern United States and Canada.

He met advocates in northern California displaying the benefits of fire to control forest ecology and specifically prescribed burns to remove pests and undergrowth at an acorn-oak orchard. Then in Iceland, he visited the Climeworks direct-air capture plant removing carbon by injecting CO2 into basaltic rocks.

The result of all his travels, discussions, and research reveals the thesis that not only is there Life on Earth but Life is Earth. Everywhere we look we find life so abundantly intertwined in the rocks, soil, water, and air that this makes us question the idea to separate inorganic from organic molecular structures.

Ferris and a collaborator illustrate the evolution of our living planet showing the origins of the planet 4.6 billion years ago with one-celled bacteria evolving into multicellular microbes indicating fossil evidence of stromatolites 3.5 billion years ago. Photosynthesis provided oxygen to create the atmosphere about 2.5 billion years ago (trapping gases in space mostly due to Earth’s gravity), divergence of plant and animal species about 1 billion years ago, and fungi, lichen, and plants spreading on land beginning about 700 million years ago. The more “recent” 500 million years of geologic history is very well documented by fossil evidence but I was not aware of wildfires occurring over 420 million years ago.

Impacts from human activities may have begun with hunting megafauna (e.g. mammoths) to extinction 50,000 to 10,000 years ago. Ferris Jabr documents other impacts including loss of habitats, destruction of the rainforest and devotes an entire chapter to plastics washed up on Kamilo Beach, Hawaii and integrated into sea life. He provides extensive discussion of greenhouse gas emissions drastically changing our climate and the urgency for action.

As challenging it must be to write on this enormous topic as well as to provide a very terse summary in this blog, I would have like to read more about how prescribed burns can contribute to climate change. I agree with the benefits of prescribed burns to prevent bigger wildfires when they can be controlled. Unfortunately, changing the established US Forest Service policy for the past 80+ years to put out small fires (see my blog on Did Smokey the Bear Get the Axe) does not account for climate-induced droughts and numerous uncontrolled burns seems to me can make our situation (from homeowners to all species) much worse.

I highly recommend getting and reading this book and not relying on my summary which I compiled mostly for my own educational purposes to share with middle and high school students. It’s very difficult taking complex, detailed, science information and making it understandable to a general audience. I own any potential mistakes or compressions in logic contained in my summary that do not relate to the excellent book being reviewed. Ferris Jabr’s new Random House book published this year is titled Becoming Earth: How Our Planet Came to Life.

Updated: December 3, 2024

Received the following email response from the author:

From: Ferris Jabr <ferris.jabr@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Dec 2, 2024 at 12:30 PM
Subject: Re: My blog on your book Becoming Earth
Dear Bill,

Thank you so much for reading and engaging with my work. I don't have a newsletter at present, but you can find a continually updated list of events and appearances on my website: https://www.ferrisjabr.com/events

Thanks again!

Ferris

Ferris Jabr

Author, Becoming Earth: How Our Planet Came to Life (Random House, 2024)
Contributing Writer, The New York Times Magazine and Scientific American

www.ferrisjabr.com

Cicada cuisine

This morning I took a hike around Harris Park to see if I could see birds eating cicadas. The birds were too high in the trees yet I felt luck that one cicada landed close to me so I could get this photo. According to Vox, two broods emerging together has not happened since Thomas Jefferson was President! The birds have lost interest in our seed feeder with the proliferation of these insects — apparently the males make loud noises to attract females. As a result of the cicada feast, birds will produce more offspring. My neighbor who’s an orchestra leader said the cicadas sound like a rolling high pitched snare drum. Hopefully the noise that’s annoying to us will benefit the ecosystem! Here’s a video of my walk in the woods listening to the cicadas and discovering a wildlife creature.

Contagious Consumption

Prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, one of the leading illnesses was consumption, also known as the lung disease tuberculosis (TB). The mycobacteria infection caused about 1.5 million deaths in 2018. An article in USA Today four months ago examines the history of TB consumption stating, “the disease was eradicated through elimination of poverty, improvement of nutrition and through improvement in living conditions." TB remains prevalent mostly in the developing world. Ironically, another type of consumption is afflicting the entire world by the actions of the most developed nations.

Consumption of natural resources in a consumer economy includes use of energy, food, and water. As the chart shows, people living in the United States led the world in consuming natural resources. If everyone in the world consumed resources at the rate of people in the U.S., it would take 5 Earth’s to support all the people. Obviously this is not sustainable! The World Economic Forum stated in 2019, “the extraction and processing of natural resources alone cause 90% of global biodiversity loss and water stress, and more than half of global climate change impacts.”

The U.S. has only about 4% of the world’s population yet consumes about 20% of the world’s resources. Coal-fired power plants will continue to be phased out in favor of cheaper natural gas, solar photovoltaics, wind, hydroelectric and new designs including small-modular nuclear power generation. A green energy revolution is just beginning but sustainable consumption must be considered for all industries. Powering electric car batteries with lithium oxide places demands on this metal and other rare earth elements, which are also needed for computers and wind generators. Leading producers of these raw materials are in Australia, Chile, and China. However, the U.S. will quickly be a leading importer and consumer of green energy materials and therefore continue to be dependent on imports of natural resources.

As the Covid-19 pandemic becomes even more contagious (as well as TB and other diseases), we need to carefully reassess holistic connections among health care, dependency on natural resources, and consumerism to develop global actions that preserves and protects the planet and essential biodiversity.

Some of the personal and societal solutions are quite obvious: wearing a mask, washing hands, taking vaccines, 3R’s (reduce, reuse, recycle), walking, ride a bicycle, live near your work or telecommute, carry reusable water bottles and shopping bags, and buy products that promote sustainable living.

Celebrate World Environment Day!

Today, the United Nations is celebrating World Environment Day! The theme of this year’s annual celebration is protecting Biodiversity and the host country is Columbia. There are great events including podcasts, films, talks by world leaders and celebrities, scientists including Dr. Jane Goodall, videos and more on the features page.

To appreciate our environment means getting outside, setting up the tent for a sleep out, hiking, planting trees, or just sitting in the cool shade!

5th Grader Memories of the Praying Mantis

I frequently support the local charter school as a substitute teacher for grades 2-12 including the 5th grade. We see Praying Mantis insects around Grand Junction and a 5th grader told me they are weird and fast.

When I was in 5th grade over 50 years ago, I thought the Praying Mantis was a very cool, religious insect. We saw many of these insects in the fields around our school. I recall asking the teacher what do they pray for? She said the females like to eat the males so it depended on which sex was doing the praying!

For more interesting facts about the Praying Mantis, see the ThoughtCo. website.

Living in the Now and Planning for More than Just Today

I've heard a famous spiritual teacher say the past is like a cancelled check and the future is not here yet. We can live with our full awareness on the present moment while at the same time consider living our lives for more than just today. Anyone who wonders where their next meal will come from or where they will sleep at night is living day to day. Most people with jobs are living month to month and spending most of what they make on expenses and saving very little if anything. Getting a financial education for most of us is learning by the school of hard knocks and there is also luck involved - who could have predicted the housing market crash? My parents taught us to be generous while also being aware of how to make and keep a buck. For years I've said at work - another day another dollar!

Over the course of a career, we've learned to spend no more than 25% of our income on housing and find ways to pay off loans as quickly as possible. I always prefer a 15 year over a 30 year loan for the lower interest rates and total savings. The real estate industry may want us to buy a larger home and spend more than we really need as they get paid by commissions. Living within our means, separating our wants from our needs, and conserving resources works for our family; however, this is not typical in the consumer society where we always seem to want more. Consider we bought our 42" flat screen TV nine years ago. It is the only TV in our home. We've been admiring all the fancy new sets with 70" curved screens as a major want but not a need - only when our TV stops working can we justify getting a new one as we are content and grateful for what we have now. One financial planner said to consider not only the present cost but also the future compound interest. For example, investing instead of buying that $1,000 TV today results in about doubling the amount at 5% interest over 30 years. 

By analogy, how do we want (or need) to save and spend our natural resources? Do we want to search for water and food supplies on a daily, weekly, monthly, or yearly basis? Sustainability is really all about wise planning so we do not waste what we have and need now and not forsake our future. Perhaps society focused on consumption rather than saving for the future is great for corporate profits but not so great for future generations as populations increase and natural resources diminish. A great book on the topic is by E.O. Wilson Biodiversity Foundation who advocates we must save half of the Earth to protect many species from extinction and ultimately if we are to save humanity as well. The Hopi society promotes the idea of considering how a decision we make might affect the next seven generations. I think about all the great civilizations that have come and gone including the Puebloans, Greeks and Romans and wonder if global consumerism promoting wants will eventually be extinguished by sustainable survivalists, like the Hopi, who are careful to control what they really need.