E.O. Wilson calls for an Encyclopedia of Life

72,307 views ・ 2007-04-05

TED


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I have all my life wondered what "mind-boggling" meant.
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After two days here, I declare myself boggled, and enormously impressed,
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and feel that you are one of the great hopes --
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not just for American achievement in science and technology,
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but for the whole world.
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I've come, however, on a special mission on behalf of my constituency,
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which are the 10-to-the-18th-power -- that's a million trillion --
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insects and other small creatures, and to make a plea for them.
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If we were to wipe out insects alone, just that group alone, on this planet --
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which we are trying hard to do --
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the rest of life and humanity with it would mostly disappear from the land.
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And within a few months.
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Now, how did I come to this particular position of advocacy?
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As a little boy, and through my teenage years,
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I became increasingly fascinated by the diversity of life.
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I had a butterfly period, a snake period, a bird period, a fish period, a cave period
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and finally and definitively, an ant period.
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By my college years, I was a devoted myrmecologist,
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a specialist on the biology of ants,
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but my attention and research continued to make journeys
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across the great variety of life on Earth in general --
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including all that it means to us as a species, how little we understand it
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and how pressing a danger that our activities have created for it.
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Out of that broader study has emerged a concern and an ambition,
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crystallized in the wish that I'm about to make to you.
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My choice is the culmination of a lifetime commitment
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that began with growing up on the Gulf Coast of Alabama, on the Florida peninsula.
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As far back as I can remember, I was enchanted by the natural beauty of that region
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and the almost tropical exuberance of the plants and animals that grow there.
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One day when I was only seven years old and fishing,
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I pulled a "pinfish," they're called, with sharp dorsal spines, up too hard and fast,
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and I blinded myself in one eye.
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I later discovered I was also hard of hearing,
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possibly congenitally, in the upper registers.
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So in planning to be a professional naturalist --
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I never considered anything else in my entire life --
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I found that I was lousy at bird watching and couldn't track frog calls either.
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So I turned to the teeming small creatures
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that can be held between the thumb and forefinger:
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the little things that compose the foundation of our ecosystems,
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the little things, as I like to say, who run the world.
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In so doing, I reached a frontier of biology so strange, so rich,
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that it seemed as though it exists on another planet.
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In fact, we live on a mostly unexplored planet.
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The great majority of organisms on Earth remain unknown to science.
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In the last 30 years, thanks to explorations in remote parts of the world
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and advances in technology,
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biologists have, for example, added a full one-third of the known frog and other amphibian species,
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to bring the current total to 5,400,
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and more continue to pour in.
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Two new kinds of whales have been discovered, along with two new antelopes,
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dozens of monkey species and a new kind of elephant --
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and even a distinct kind of gorilla.
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At the extreme opposite end of the size scale, the class of marine bacteria,
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the Prochlorococci -- that will be on the final exam --
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although discovered only in 1988, are now recognized as likely the most abundant organisms on Earth,
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and moreover, responsible for a large part of the photosynthesis that occurs in the ocean.
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These bacteria were not uncovered sooner
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because they are also among the smallest of all Earth's organisms --
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so minute that they cannot be seen with conventional optical microscopy.
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Yet life in the sea may depend on these tiny creatures.
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These examples are just the first glimpse of our ignorance of life on this planet.
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Consider the fungi -- including mushrooms, rusts, molds and many disease-causing organisms.
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60,000 species are known to science,
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but more than 1.5 million have been estimated to exist.
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Consider the nematode roundworm, the most abundant of all animals.
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Four out of five animals on Earth are nematode worms --
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if all solid materials except nematode worms were to be eliminated,
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you could still see the ghostly outline of most of it in nematode worms.
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About 16,000 species of nematode worms
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have been discovered and diagnosed by scientists;
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there could be hundreds of thousands of them, even millions, still unknown.
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This vast domain of hidden biodiversity is increased still further
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by the dark matter of the biological world of bacteria,
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which within just the last several years
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still were known from only about 6,000 species of bacteria worldwide.
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But that number of bacteria species can be found in one gram of soil,
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just a little handful of soil, in the 10 billion bacteria that would be there.
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It's been estimated that a single ton of soil -- fertile soil --
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contains approximately four million species of bacteria, all unknown.
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So the question is: what are they all doing?
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The fact is, we don't know.
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We are living on a planet with a lot of activities, with reference to our living environment,
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done by faith and guess alone.
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Our lives depend upon these creatures.
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To take an example close to home: there are over 500 species of bacteria now known --
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friendly bacteria -- living symbiotically in your mouth and throat
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probably necessary to your health for holding off pathogenic bacteria.
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At this point I think we have a little impressionistic film
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that was made especially for this occasion.
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And I'd like to show it.
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Assisted in this by Billie Holiday.
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(Video)
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And that may be just the beginning!
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The viruses, those quasi-organisms among which are the prophages,
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the gene weavers that promote the continued evolution in the lives of the bacteria,
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are a virtually unknown frontier of modern biology, a world unto themselves.
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What constitutes a viral species is still unresolved,
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although they're obviously of enormous importance to us.
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But this much we can say: the variety of genes on the planet in viruses
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exceeds, or is likely to exceed, that in all of the rest of life combined.
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Nowadays, in addressing microbial biodiversity,
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scientists are like explorers in a rowboat launched onto the Pacific Ocean.
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But that is changing rapidly with the aid of new genomic technology.
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Already it is possible to sequence the entire genetic code of a bacterium in under four hours.
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Soon we will be in a position to go forth in the field with sequencers on our backs --
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to hunt bacteria in tiny crevices of the habitat's surface
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in the way you go watching for birds with binoculars.
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What will we find as we map the living world, as, finally, we get this underway seriously?
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As we move past the relatively gigantic mammals, birds, frogs and plants
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to the more elusive insects and other small invertebrates and then beyond
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to the countless millions of organisms in the invisible living world
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enveloped and living within humanity?
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Already what were thought to be bacteria for generations
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have been found to compose, instead, two great domains of microorganisms:
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true bacteria and one-celled organisms the archaea,
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which are closer than other bacteria to the eukaryota, the group that we belong to.
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Some serious biologists, and I count myself among them,
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have begun to wonder that among the enormous and still unknown diversity of microorganisms,
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one might -- just might -- find aliens among them.
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True aliens, stocks that arrived from outer space.
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They've had billions of years to do it,
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but especially during the earliest period of biological evolution on this planet.
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We do know that some bacterial species that have earthly origin
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are capable of almost unimaginable extremes of temperature
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and other harsh changes in environment,
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including hard radiation strong enough and maintained long enough to crack the Pyrex vessels
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around the growing population of bacteria.
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There may be a temptation to treat the biosphere holistically
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and the species that compose it as a great flux of entities
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hardly worth distinguishing one from the other.
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But each of these species, even the tiniest Prochlorococci,
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are masterpieces of evolution.
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Each has persisted for thousands to millions of years.
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Each is exquisitely adapted to the environment in which it lives,
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interlocked with other species to form ecosystems upon which our own lives depend
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in ways we have not begun even to imagine.
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We will destroy these ecosystems and the species composing them
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at the peril of our own existence --
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and unfortunately we are destroying them with ingenuity and ceaseless energy.
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My own epiphany as a conservationist came in 1953, while a Harvard graduate student,
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searching for rare ants found in the mountain forests of Cuba,
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ants that shine in the sunlight --
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metallic green or metallic blue, according to species, and one species, I discovered, metallic gold.
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I found my magical ants, but only after a tough climb into the mountains
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where the last of the native Cuban forests hung on,
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and were then -- and still are -- being cut back.
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I realized then that these species
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and a large part of the other unique, marvelous animals and plants on that island --
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and this is true of practically every part of the world --
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which took millions of years to evolve, are in the process of disappearing forever.
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And so it is everywhere one looks.
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The human juggernaut is permanently eroding Earth's ancient biosphere by a combination of forces
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that can be summarized by the acronym "HIPPO," the animal hippo.
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H is for habitat destruction, including climate change forced by greenhouse gases.
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I is for the invasive species like the fire ants, the zebra mussels, broom grasses
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and pathogenic bacteria and viruses that are flooding every country, and at an exponential rate -- that's the I.
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The P, the first one in "HIPPO," is for pollution.
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The second is for continued population, human population expansion.
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And the final letter is O, for over-harvesting --
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driving species into extinction by excessive hunting and fishing.
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The HIPPO juggernaut we have created, if unabated, is destined --
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according to the best estimates of ongoing biodiversity research --
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to reduce half of Earth's still surviving animal and plant species
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to extinction or critical endangerment by the end of the century.
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Human-forced climate change alone -- again, if unabated --
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could eliminate a quarter of surviving species during the next five decades.
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What will we and all future generations lose
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if much of the living environment is thus degraded?
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Huge potential sources of scientific information yet to be gathered,
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much of our environmental stability
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and new kinds of pharmaceuticals and new products of unimaginable strength and value --
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all thrown away.
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The loss will inflict a heavy price
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in wealth, security and yes, spirituality for all time to come,
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because previous cataclysms of this kind --
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the last one, that ended the age of dinosaurs --
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took, normally, five to 10 million years to repair.
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Sadly, our knowledge of biodiversity is so incomplete
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that we are at risk of losing a great deal of it before it is even discovered.
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For example, even in the United States, the 200,000 species known currently
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actually has been found to be only partial in coverage;
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it is mostly unknown to us in basic biology.
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Only about 15 percent of the known species have been studied well enough to evaluate their status.
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Of the 15 percent evaluated, 20 percent are classified as "in peril,"
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that is, in danger of extinction.
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That's in the United States.
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We are, in short, flying blind into our environmental future.
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We urgently need to change this.
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We need to have the biosphere properly explored
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so that we can understand and competently manage it.
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We need to settle down before we wreck the planet.
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And we need that knowledge.
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This should be a big science project equivalent to the Human Genome Project.
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It should be thought of as a biological moonshot with a timetable.
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So this brings me to my wish for TEDsters,
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and to anyone else around the world who hears this talk.
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I wish we will work together to help create the key tools
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that we need to inspire preservation of Earth's biodiversity.
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And let us call it the "Encyclopedia of Life."
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What is the "Encyclopedia of Life?" A concept that has already taken hold
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and is beginning to spread and be looked at seriously?
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It is an encyclopedia that lives on the Internet
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and is contributed to by thousands of scientists around the world.
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Amateurs can do it also.
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It has an indefinitely expandable page for each species.
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It makes all key information about life on Earth accessible to anyone,
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on demand, anywhere in the world.
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I've written about this idea before,
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and I know there are people in this room who have expended significant effort on it in the past.
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But what excites me is that since I first put forward this particular idea in that form,
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science has advanced.
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Technology has moved forward.
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Today, the practicalities of making such an encyclopedia,
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regardless of the magnitude of the information put into it, are within reach.
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Indeed, in the past year, a group of influential scientific institutions
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have begun mobilizing to realize this dream.
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I wish you would help them.
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Working together, we can make this real.
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The encyclopedia will quickly pay for itself in practical applications.
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It will address transcendent qualities in the human consciousness, and sense of human need.
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It will transform the science of biology in ways of obvious benefit to humanity.
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And most of all, it can inspire a new generation of biologists
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to continue the quest that started, for me personally, 60 years ago:
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to search for life, to understand it and finally, above all, to preserve it.
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That is my wish. Thank you.
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