Passengers Pigeons once flew in flocks across the North
Americas that were so large and dense they would darken the skies for hours. At the turn of the 19th century,
their population was estimated at 5 billion and they made up ¼ of all the birds
in the North Americas.
But the land these flocks were flying over was changing
rapidly and beyond all recognition. Slave colonies were being expanded which
needed the cheapest protein sources possible, and nothing was cheaper than plucking
tonnes of high quality protein out the sky. At the same time the
industrialisation of the continent brought railways and logistics networks to
allow this cheap protein to go straight to the market.
It probably remains one of the most perfect illustrations of
the paradoxes that human development causes, as well as being one of the
first. The result was that the number of
passenger pigeons started declining, while the slave plantations and industrial
networks that supported them grew. Within a short time the numbers of
passengers pigeons had fallen to a critical level, at which point the birds
that had evolved to live in large social communities were unable to survive.
The population decline was transformed into a population nosedive. By the turn
of the century the passenger pigeons were extinct. Slavery was abolished which
begs a curious question; was the collapse of slavery driven partly by the
economics becoming less favourable due to the loss of a cheap protein source?
The only survivor was the industrialised system which then went on to exploit
other natural sources.
A similar argument played out in the cod fisheries in
Newfoundland which were once world's most productive
fishing grounds. The
first European explorers described the waters as being so full, one just had to
lower a basket into the water and it would come up filled with cod. Up to the
1950s the bounty of the Grand Banks was enough to supply local small-scale
fishing, as well as feed millions of harp seals.
But this happy picture was
not to last. The Grand Banks fishery was destroyed by technological advances in
fishing techniques in the 1950s and 60s. Small artisan fishing boats found
themselves competing with trawlers modelled on the factory whaling ships that
had devastated the last remaining whale populations.
The giant trawlers came from distant countries, attracted by the
seemingly endless bounty of the fishery. Their huge nets took unprecedented
amounts of fish, which they would quickly process and deep-freeze. The trawlers
worked around the clock, in all but the very worst weather. In an hour they
would haul up to 200 tonnes of fish; twice the amount a typical 16th century
ship would catch in an entire season.
In 1968, the cod catch peaked at 800,000 tonnes. By 1975, the
annual catch had fallen by more than 60 per cent. Catches of other fish species
were also plummeting. In a desperate attempt to increase catches Canada
extended its fishing limit for foreign vessels from 12 to 200 miles from the
coast.
As cod catches declined, factory trawlers used ever more
powerful sonar and satellite navigation to target what was left. This led to
overall catches remaining steady throughout the 1980s. But traditional inshore
fishermen noticed their catches declining. The government, most members of
which owned shares in industrial fishing companies, refused to listen to them,
or to the growing scientific warnings that cod was in crisis.
Politicians also feared that cutting the quota would lead to
politically unacceptable job losses, but their short-term thinking led to
catastrophe.
By 1992, when the cod catch was the lowest ever measured, the
government was forced to close the fishery. The moratorium put 40,000 people
out of work in 5 Canadian provinces, and required a several billion dollar
relief package to be disbursed to coastal communities.
In 1993 the moratorium,
initially put in place for two years, was extended indefinitely. In 2003, the
two main populations of Atlantic cod were added to Canada's list of endangered
species. Recovery efforts are hampered by the trawling for other species that
still goes on in the area, and which often leads to high levels of cod as
bycatch.
Like passenger pigeons, the
cod lived in huge shoals. Like the flocks of the passenger pigeons, the size of
the shoals and population density was a critical factor in their survival. With
a large population density, larger cod would predate on other fish and
crustations that would otherwise threaten the cod nurseries. Once the population density fell below a
critical level, recovery is virtually impossible. Since the moratorium in 1993
still no reliable recovery in cod stocks have occurred, and what catches were
allowed were still reported as
declining in 2013.
The Passenger pigeons
extinction and cod crash raise an interesting question for humanity. If these
social animals have a critical population level, below which recovery is
impossible and extinction becomes inevitable, what is the critical population
for human societies?
Pre industrialisation, it would
have been relatively low as food was abundant in the local environment and skills
were honed to exploit and sustain these. Those tribes still living nomadically
across the world at the beginning of the 20th century were testimony
to this, from the Australian Aboriginals to the Eskimos of the Arctic.
Post industrialisation and
post climate change collapse, a very different scenario will emerge. Little natural
environment will be left which can be exploited and sustaining this will be an
almost impossible job. High quality food that was once free, such as passenger
pigeons which could be plucked out of the sky or cod that could be scooped out of the sea, has already long since gone and
will not return in a post climate change collapse environment. What foods we
have today are already energy intensive and dependent on fossil fuel. In a post collapse society they will be even more so. This in turns means that a fossil
fuel industry must be kept going which will be impossible without a large
population to provide the equipment and manufacturing infrastructure.
So the dilemma of the
passenger pigeons and cod stocks comes to haunt us. On the best and most optimistic
assumption, the sustainable global population is considerably less than 1
billion if any degree of industrialisation is be maintained, most likely in the
order of no more than 10 million. Once climate collapse hits us, it is maybe as
low as 1 million people scratching out a living around the Arctic. However, if
this is below the critical level that is needed for survival then that small
band of survivors will succumb. So climate change imposes two conflicting
targets, the sustainable population must go down while the critical level for
long term survival goes up. Once these two levels pass each other, eventual extinction
is unavoidable.
See The Vortex of Violence and why we are losing the war on climate change
See The Vortex of Violence and why we are losing the war on climate change