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South Africa's earliest
conservation organisations, formed in the 1800s, were
game preservation associations, concerned primarily
with protection of wildlife. These were formed by
hunters concerned about declining numbers of wild
animals. Single species conservation formed the focus
of conservation efforts in South Africa until fairly
recently, when people became aware that all species
are dependant on their habitat and life support
systems. The realization that the earth's resources
(living and non- living) are both finite, and
essential for the survival of human, and other life,
contributed to a broadening of the concept of
conservation to include, as well as wild animals, all
the interacting components of an ecosystem that are
necessary for its healthy functioning. More recently,
scientific and technological advances, such as the
use of satellites, have allowed us to assess global
environmental problems such as depletion of ozone
(see Enviro Facts "Ozone"), and global
warming (see Enviro Facts "Global warming").
Today, conservation has come to be
described as the wise use of the earth's resources
such that they will be able to support, or sustain,
all life for generations ahead. Conservation is
practised in different ways in different situations.
For example:
* In a national park, conservation
might involve protection of ecosystems including
endangered species, such as the black rhino (see
Enviro Facts "Rhino").
* In agriculture, conservation
might involve permaculture techniques (see Enviro
Facts "Permaculture,"
"Soil," "Soil erosion"), or river
catchment management (see Enviro Facts "River catchments,"
"Wetlands,"
"Estuaries").
* In industry, pollution control
measures (see Enviro Facts "Pollution," "Integrated Environmental Management"),
or environmental auditing (see Enviro Facts "Environmental auditing")
is in keeping with the `wise use of resources'.
* In our personal lives, recycling
waste in our home is a conservation action (see
Enviro Facts "War on waste").
The above examples show that
conservation involves the use of resources, in many
different situations, all of which include protection
and maintenance (e.g. national parks and game
reserves), and rehabilitation and restoration of
ecosystems and their populations (e.g. planting of
trees and shrubs along a degraded riverbank).
Conservation is also applied to our
cultural heritage, thus including things of
historical importance, such as old buildings, battle
fields and oral traditions.
WHY
CONSERVE?
Some people argue that the creation has an intrinsic
value and thus a right to exist, independently of
human use. Christian belief is that people will
achieve harmony with nature through Jesus Christ.
This is in keeping with the view that the solution to
our environmental problems lies not only in
technological or scientific advance, but in an
awareness of the non-material dimension of the
human-environment relationship.
In addition to the `intrinsic
value' argument for conservation, people are
dependant on natural resources for a variety of
reasons:
Ecological
Value
Ecology is the study of the interactions and
relationships between all living (plants and animal)
and non-living (e.g. soil, water, air) things on
earth. From ecology we have learnt of the
interdependence of all living and non-living things.
"All things are connected,
like the blood that unites one family. Whatever
befalls the earth, befalls the sons of the earth. Man
did not weave the web of life; he is merely a strand
in it. Whatever he does to the web, he does to
himself." - Chief Seattle.
Ecological reasons for conservation
demonstrate the need to care for the life support
systems of the planet. The greenhouse effect (see
Enviro Facts "Global
warming") illustrates the breakdown of a
life support system, the maintenance of the carbon
dioxide balance in the atmosphere. Increased burning
of fossil fuels, such as coal, oil and gas, releases
greater amounts of carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere. Deforestation results in less carbon
dioxide being taken up by plants (see Enviro Facts
"Deforestation").
The overall result is an increase in the carbon
dioxide concentration of the atmosphere, and this
contributes to a warming of the earth's atmosphere.
Economic
Value
Healthy ecosystems
Most sections of our economy are dependant on natural
resources. For example, industries such as forestry,
fishing, agriculture and tourism, are all dependent
on the healthy functioning of the natural
environment. If the resource base on which these
industries depend is damaged, the industries
themselves suffer. For example, overfishing of
pilchards off the west coast of South Africa and
Namibia resulted in the 1970s crash in fish
populations, and harvests dropped dramatically.
Genetic diversity
Plants and animals contain a largely untapped store
of genetic diversity which may be of great value in
plant and animal breeding programmes (see Enviro
Facts "Biodiversity"
and "Biodiversity in South
Africa"). In addition, plants are chemical
factories able to make vast numbers of complex and
unusual substances, many of which are potential
medicines for humankind. Examples of existing drugs
based on plants include:
* quinine, an anti-malarial
medicine, made from a substance in the yellow
cinchona plant;
* aspirin, a common drug, has been
developed from a blueprint supplied by the bark of
the willow tree;
* the rosy periwinkle produces
substances which are effective in the treatment of
leukaemia.
We cannot predict which resources
may be of use in the future - thus it is important
that we leave our options open and maintain the
earth's biodiversity (see Enviro Facts "Biodiversity" and
"Biodiversity in South
Africa").
"Few problems are less
recognised, but more important than the accelerating
disappearance of the earth's biological resources. In
pushing other species to extinction, humanity is busy
sawing off the limb on which it is perched" -
Professor Paul Ehrlich, Stanford University.
Aesthetic
value
The beauty and peacefulness of the mountains, the sea
and the bushveld attracts people for recreation, rest
and refreshing inspiration. Nature is a refuge to
which people turn, time and again, to be nourished
and revitalised.
"The good of going into
the mountains is that life is reconsidered." -
Ralph Waldo Emerson
TOPICS FOR
DEBATE
* South Africa has an excellent international
reputation for conservation, especially for the
management of its National Parks and game reserves.
However, rural people living in poverty on the
borders of parks and reserves seldom have access to
the `wealth' of these areas - should they?
FURTHER
READING
THE GAIA ATLAS OF PLANET
MANAGEMENT. N. Myers (ed) Pan Books, London,
1985.
NEW GROUND: THE JOURNAL OF
DEVELOPMENT AND ENVIRONMENT. Environmental
and Development Agency.
OUR COMMON FUTURE. THE
WORLD COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT.
Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1987.
CARING FOR THE EARTH: A
STRATEGY FOR SUSTAINABLE LIVING. IUCN, UNEP, WWF. Gland, 1991.
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT IN
SOUTH AFRICA. R. Fuggle and M. Rabie. Juta
and Co., Cape Town, 1992.
THE GREEN PAGES
1991/1992.
Environmental networking and resource directory for
southern Africa. Weekly Mail, Johannesburg.
GOING GREEN: PEOPLE,
POLITICS AND THE ENVIRONMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA.
J. Cock and E. Koch (eds). Oxford University Press,
Cape Town, 1991.
BACK TO EARTH: SOUTH
AFRICA'S ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES. J.
Clarke. Southern Books, Johannesburg, 1991.
A SAND COUNTY
ALMANAC.
A. Leopold. Oxford University Press, 1949.
THE TURNING POINT: SCIENCE
SOCIETY AND THE RISING CULTURE. F. Capra.
Flamingo, London, 1982.
All books are available from Russel
Friedman Books, PO Box 73, Halfway House 1685. Tel:
011-7022300/1.
USEFUL
ADDRESSES
The "Green pages", details above, is a
directory of conservation, and other related organisations.
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