Tag Archives: conservation

Arabian Oryx Rebound

As I have published, there are over 10,000 animals endangered, and right behind them there are another 10,000 that are threatened. If people don’t act now, all 20,000 are going to one day be extinct. One team of scientists did just that.

The Arabian Oryx was thought to have been hunted to complete extinction by poachers. David Mallon, co-chair of an antelope specialist group said, “As soon as motor vehicles and modern weapons arrived, the destructive potential of hunting rapidly increased. Before, if you were on a camel and you had a single shot, by the time you had another bullet in the gun, the oryx would’ve run off. But when motor vehicles and more modern, reloadable rifles were introduced — you can wear oryx out through exhaustion — hunting became a lot easier.”

A team of scientists went off on a quest to find the remaining Arabian Oryx. They brought a couple back and bred them. There are now a total of about 1,220 in the wild, moving the population up to threatened; the first animal species to come from thought extinction to a “mere” Threatened. To move the Oryxes up to Near Threatened, the population needs to reach 1,400 but considering where they came from and where they are now, that is just one small jump for Oryx, yet one huge leap for Animal Kind. Let’s make a difference; one creature at a time.

Photo by Charl Durand on Pexels.com

Palm oil Deforestation

Okay, I’m gonna get straight to the point. I hate reading the words “palm oil” on packaging at the grocery store. If you buy a product made with palm oil, you could have encouraged and supported an orangutans death.

Photo by Chris F on Pexels.com

Between 2000 and 2012, Indonesia had lost 15 million acres of rain forest mainly from palm oil deforestation. Large sections are being burned out for palm oil plantations. We have talked about how ecosystems work. No trees for the Orangutans means no food, no shelter, and most of all, no hope. There is such a thing as sustainable palm oil but I have found it is so much easier to buy products without palm oil period.

What can you do? The bigger question is what you should not do.That means do not support deforestation. You should support organizations that helps restore our rain forests.

One person may only save one tree but together, we make an impact. We save rain forests together. We stand hand in hand. We fight together. We will save together. We work, you know the word, together. Together we will save the rain forests. Together.

Ocean Debris

Hello. I’m finally back again. Now, I’m pretty sure that I have talked about compost before. Now for sea debris. (I’m a poet and I don’t know it)

Imagine this. (Or maybe you don’t have to. Maybe you’re at the checkout counter right now waiting for your turn while reading this on your phone.) A cashier gives you your total. You put your bags in your cart. You take it out to your car. When you get home you throw the plastic bags away. Plastic! You just threw out a PLASTIC bag. P-L-A-S-T-I-C!

The bag get’s blown away from the dump. The wind dies down. The bag lands in a stream and fills with water. It slowly drifts downstream. It flows into the Missouri River. No, this is not a meditation exercise. The Missouri River pulls it into the ocean. It drifts into a current. It flows straight into the feeding grounds of the Leatherback Turtle. A Leatherback spies a Jellyfish. Or is it a Jellyfish? The Leatherback chomps down. But it was not a Jellyfish. It was the plastic bag! (duh duh duh,) the Leatherback starts choking. It’s running out of air! The Leatherback tries on more desperate attempt to breath. And then dies.

Plastic bags don’t only affect turtles. They affect anything and everything and can take up to 20 YEARS to decompose in the ocean. Make it simple. Lead a rebellion. Talk to store owners. Only use paper bags. Recycle plastic bags. Help make our oceans beautiful again!

The begining

One day, I was struck at the news that about two hundred types of animals and plants are going extinct each day; That’s Two hundred every day, never to be seen a day. That was when I knew I had to do something, so I created this sight for the world to see. We are in huge trouble. Us humans have made this mess and we are going to clean it up. I’ll keep you updated so we can save our planet! Go places, see things, and MAKE A DIFFERENCE!