Monday, June 30, 2025

The Sixth Extinction by Elizabeth Kolbert

 


    Reading a book can be an opportunity to “travel” to different time periods and regions of the world. The Sixth Extinction is a non-fiction book that offers that kind of opportunity.  For example, it goes back 300 million years ago, to the Permian period, and to the Cretaceous period, 100 million years ago. The book also visits the recent past and examines the present by exploring various regions such as the fragmented Amazon rainforest, a fast-warming slope in the Andes and the outer reaches of the Great Barrier Reef.

    Elizabeth Kolbert’s book tracks the extinction of some species and examines the decline of others.

   To put everything in context, let’s focus for a moment on the Homo sapiens species, which is our own species. Homo sapiens emerged around two hundred thousand years ago, and it has done to the planet what no other species has done: “Having discovered subterranean reserves of energy, humans began to change the composition of the atmosphere. This alters the climate and the chemistry of the oceans. Some animals and plants adjust by moving, but thousands of species succumb gradually and become extinct as a consequence of human actions.”

  I happened to be reading this book when I learned that hundreds of dolphins,seabirds and sea lions were washing up dead on the West Coast of the UnitedStates of America.

  The Vancouver Sun report revealed that the dolphins, seabirds and sea lions appeared sick or dead on the shore due to a neurotoxin called domoic acid. The toxin is produced by algae blooms proliferating in excess due to climate change and global warming. The neurotoxin is present in the fish they feed on, causing the massive number of deaths.

    Since the start of the industrial Revolution humans have burned through enough fossil fuels—coal, oil and natural gas—to add 365 billion metric tons of carbon to the atmosphere. Deforestation has contributed another 180 billion tons.   Each year we throw up another nine billion tons or so, an amount that has been increasing six percent annually.

 “By burning through coal and oil deposits humans are putting carbon back into the air that has been sequestered for millions of years.”

  One third of the carbon dioxide that humans have pumped into the air gets absorbed by the oceans causing ocean acidification. The rapidity at which the carbon dioxide is released by human actions does not give the system time to adapt and the speed is happening at unprecedented levels.

  Ocean acidification 

  I don't understand why ocean acidification is constantly ignored. I appreciate how Elizabeth Kolbert's highlights this issue. 

  Ocean acidification has been referred to as global warming’s “equally evil twin.” It has multiple effects; one of the effects is that it compromises the integrity of coral reefs. The survival of millions of marine animals depends on coral reefs, so if coral reefs are affected, millions of marine animals are affected too.

 According to Dr. Ken Caldeira, if carbon dioxide emission trends continue at this rate, corals will not survive this century.



 The only quibble I have about Elizabeth Kolbert’s Sixth Extinction is that her writing style is convoluted at times and some of her ramblings dilute the important facts she shares. On the other hand, she offers metaphors to facilitate the understanding of complex concepts for people who lack training in science. I think some of those metaphors may  be useful to make the book more accessible to people who have no clue, although I doubt that her writing style will appeal to such people. The fact that seventy-five million voters in the United States of America chose a climate denier over a competent persn indicates that too many people have no clue, and the United States of America is positioned in second place in terms of carbon emissions.

 Favorite parts

  My favorite parts of The Sixth Extinction are the chapters on the following topics:

 - the golden frogs in Panama

-Ocean acidification

-Neanderthal extinction


  Conclusion

   I highly recommend The Sixth Extinction. I hope the book will be integrated into the school curricula. I think it should be used as an invitation to watch what is happening around us. Educating citizens on the need to vote for politicians who take climate change seriously is an important step, but it is not the only one, so let’s raise awareness on the need to understand the topic and to address it in every way we can. 

 Our survival depends on it.

 

Relevant links:

https://yaleclimateconnections.org/2021/09/can-the-economy-afford-not-to-fight-climate-change/

 

https://usa.oceana.org/effects-ocean-acidification-corals/

https://vancouversun.com/news/dfo-monitoring-toxic-algae-bc-waters-as-hundreds-of-dolphins-sea-lions-dead-california

https://davidsuzuki.org/story/ignoring-climate-change-is-just-too-expensive/

 

https://www.cnn.com/2025/06/29/us/alligator-alcatraz-protests-immigration-florida-hnk

 

 Feel free to check my writing on the following books as well:


Hurricane Lizards and Plastic Squid by Thor Hanson

 

 The Comfort of Crows by Margaret Renkl

Friday, June 13, 2025

The Permaculture Transition Manual: A Comprehensive Guide to Resilient Living

 


   Due to the high prices of groceries one of my goals is to optimize the production of food in my backyard.

  Think about the benefits of enjoying fresh, locally grown food while supporting the earth and helping to maintain the water and air clean. What is not to like about this? To accomplish this goal, I rely on the principles of permaculture.

   The Permaculture Transition Manual by Ross Mars is a good resource to work toward the goal of producing more nutrient-dense food in less space while supporting the health of the planet. In doing so, we collaborate to sustain the ecosystems that support life, the production of healthy food and the supply of clean water.



  You don’t even need to own a garden to do so. You can join a community garden and work to apply permaculture principles there. Another option is to support a local CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) that you trust. The options do not exclude each other, which means that you can choose all of them.

   Supporting initiatives and policies that encourage the development and promotion of permaculture principles is a path of health, balance and harmony with one another and with the earth. It creates the setting for an environment that is better able to respond to the challenges posed by climate change. Furthermore, it helps to reduce carbon emissions which contribute to worsening climate change, and it avoids the use of synthetic fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides that poison our water, air and soil.

 


Food sovereignty and food security. What do they mean?

 The first chapter of the book is a clear introduction to the topic. It also explains the difference between food sovereignty and food security.

 Food sovereignty has to do with the control we have over the food we eat. Having food sovereignty means that we have more responsibility and are more involved over the policies that apply to food production.

Food security is about access to sufficient food that is safe and nutritious. There are four components of food security: availability, access, use and stability.

  Access can be compromised when people cannot afford to buy the food they need to stay healthy. The use of food can also be affected when certain foods are not safe to be consumed. There are multiple aspects of food security and food sovereignty that are threatened and affected by the current regime in the United States of America. You can read about this here, and I encourage you to share this information extensively with your networks:

   Irrespective of your political party affiliation, you will be appalled to learn that the Trump regime is taking away the subsidies that supply fresh, healthy food to school children and, in doing so, it hurts local farmers who count on that income to support and sustain their farms.

  I do not understand why any person in his or her right mind would vote to take food away from children while compromising the farmers who supply the food. It makes no sense.



 

Permaculture goes beyond food production

 While it is true that permaculture is about growing enough food and having a lifestyle that will enable you to become self-reliant—not self-sufficient-- and less dependent on the marketplace and agencies outside of our control, permaculture is also a way of life in which we choose to live more sustainably. It is about how we deal with water, energy, soil and other living beings in sustainable ways. I like how Ross Mars summarizes it through this powerful statement:

                                           “Permaculture is fundamentally a vocation, a way of life. It is about taking responsibility for your life and doing the things you feel are important for your own well-being and for the wellbeing of others and to help the environment.”

 

    Unfortunately, the American regime is under the control of politicians who do not believe in sustainability. Donald Trump’s executive orders have the intention to ditch the policies that curb carbon emissions. This assault will worsen the quality of the air we all breathe, irrespective of one’s political affilitation. What kind of “president” gets rid of regulations that help citizens protect the quality of the air they breathe?

 Air pollution is one of the biggest killers across the world.

  Donald Trump’s executive orders  and his big ugly bill will help to kill more people. Why? His priority is to serve the interests of the fossil fuel corporations that help fund his political campaigns.  Yet everybody needs clean air and water. It does not matter what political party they belong to. 

  The fossil fuel corporations may satisfy his interests because they may provide funding for his political campaigns, but polluting the air and worsening climate change do not make America great, so let’s make sure we share the links in this post to help people understand the consequences of the senseless executive orders and the big ugly bill.

   In the meantime, you can also read Ross Mars’ didactic book. It contains several suggestions, advice and information to apply permaculture principles to your garden and lifestyle.

 

 Supplementary links:

https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/2025/06/04/trumps-big-ugly-bill-budget-reconciliation/

 

https://southdakotasearchlight.com/2025/05/19/trump-says-he-loves-farmers-hes-dismantling-the-agency-helping-their-communities-survive/


https://apnews.com/article/school-lunch-usda-trump-c1485f824573913fe9a734bbf1273e26


https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/jun/12/trump-canned-food-price-metal-tariffs

https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/12/climate/trump-ev-power-plant-rollbacks#openweb-convo


https://www.cnn.com/2025/06/18/climate/food-crops-heat-rain#:~:text=Rising%20global%20temperatures%20are%20set,to%20a%20sweeping%20new%20analysis.

https://www.cleanairfund.org/news-item/deaths-air-pollution-data-hope/#:~:text=The%20World%20Health%20Organization%20estimates,from%20burning%20wood%20and%20charcoal.

 

Other blog posts you may enjoy:

 Sweet in Tooth and Claw: stories of generosity and cooperation in the natural world by Kristin Ohlson. 


What a Bee Knows, by Stephen Buchmann


Addendum: I attended the peaceful No Kings Protest yesterday (June 14). I took photos of some of the signs to share them here: