E.O. Wilson calls for an Encyclopedia of Life

73,112 views ・ 2007-04-05

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:25
I have all my life wondered what "mind-boggling" meant.
0
25700
5000
00:30
After two days here, I declare myself boggled, and enormously impressed,
1
30700
10000
00:40
and feel that you are one of the great hopes --
2
40700
6000
00:46
not just for American achievement in science and technology,
3
46700
6000
00:53
but for the whole world.
4
53700
2000
00:55
I've come, however, on a special mission on behalf of my constituency,
5
55700
8000
01:03
which are the 10-to-the-18th-power -- that's a million trillion --
6
63700
9000
01:12
insects and other small creatures, and to make a plea for them.
7
72700
14000
01:26
If we were to wipe out insects alone, just that group alone, on this planet --
8
86700
6000
01:32
which we are trying hard to do --
9
92700
4000
01:36
the rest of life and humanity with it would mostly disappear from the land.
10
96700
9000
01:45
And within a few months.
11
105700
2000
01:47
Now, how did I come to this particular position of advocacy?
12
107700
6000
01:53
As a little boy, and through my teenage years,
13
113700
6000
01:59
I became increasingly fascinated by the diversity of life.
14
119700
3000
02:02
I had a butterfly period, a snake period, a bird period, a fish period, a cave period
15
122700
12000
02:14
and finally and definitively, an ant period.
16
134700
4000
02:18
By my college years, I was a devoted myrmecologist,
17
138700
5000
02:23
a specialist on the biology of ants,
18
143700
2000
02:25
but my attention and research continued to make journeys
19
145700
5000
02:30
across the great variety of life on Earth in general --
20
150700
4000
02:34
including all that it means to us as a species, how little we understand it
21
154700
8000
02:42
and how pressing a danger that our activities have created for it.
22
162700
7000
02:49
Out of that broader study has emerged a concern and an ambition,
23
169700
5000
02:54
crystallized in the wish that I'm about to make to you.
24
174700
5000
02:59
My choice is the culmination of a lifetime commitment
25
179700
5000
03:04
that began with growing up on the Gulf Coast of Alabama, on the Florida peninsula.
26
184700
7000
03:11
As far back as I can remember, I was enchanted by the natural beauty of that region
27
191700
9000
03:20
and the almost tropical exuberance of the plants and animals that grow there.
28
200700
6000
03:26
One day when I was only seven years old and fishing,
29
206700
4000
03:30
I pulled a "pinfish," they're called, with sharp dorsal spines, up too hard and fast,
30
210700
8000
03:38
and I blinded myself in one eye.
31
218700
2000
03:40
I later discovered I was also hard of hearing,
32
220700
3000
03:43
possibly congenitally, in the upper registers.
33
223700
3000
03:46
So in planning to be a professional naturalist --
34
226700
5000
03:51
I never considered anything else in my entire life --
35
231700
3000
03:54
I found that I was lousy at bird watching and couldn't track frog calls either.
36
234700
7000
04:02
So I turned to the teeming small creatures
37
242700
4000
04:06
that can be held between the thumb and forefinger:
38
246700
5000
04:11
the little things that compose the foundation of our ecosystems,
39
251700
7000
04:18
the little things, as I like to say, who run the world.
40
258700
5000
04:23
In so doing, I reached a frontier of biology so strange, so rich,
41
263700
8000
04:31
that it seemed as though it exists on another planet.
42
271700
6000
04:37
In fact, we live on a mostly unexplored planet.
43
277700
4000
04:41
The great majority of organisms on Earth remain unknown to science.
44
281700
5000
04:46
In the last 30 years, thanks to explorations in remote parts of the world
45
286700
6000
04:52
and advances in technology,
46
292700
2000
04:54
biologists have, for example, added a full one-third of the known frog and other amphibian species,
47
294700
10000
05:04
to bring the current total to 5,400,
48
304700
4000
05:08
and more continue to pour in.
49
308700
2000
05:10
Two new kinds of whales have been discovered, along with two new antelopes,
50
310700
6000
05:16
dozens of monkey species and a new kind of elephant --
51
316700
4000
05:20
and even a distinct kind of gorilla.
52
320700
3000
05:23
At the extreme opposite end of the size scale, the class of marine bacteria,
53
323700
10000
05:33
the Prochlorococci -- that will be on the final exam --
54
333700
6000
05:39
although discovered only in 1988, are now recognized as likely the most abundant organisms on Earth,
55
339700
9000
05:48
and moreover, responsible for a large part of the photosynthesis that occurs in the ocean.
56
348700
7000
05:55
These bacteria were not uncovered sooner
57
355700
4000
05:59
because they are also among the smallest of all Earth's organisms --
58
359700
5000
06:04
so minute that they cannot be seen with conventional optical microscopy.
59
364700
6000
06:10
Yet life in the sea may depend on these tiny creatures.
60
370700
4000
06:14
These examples are just the first glimpse of our ignorance of life on this planet.
61
374700
5000
06:19
Consider the fungi -- including mushrooms, rusts, molds and many disease-causing organisms.
62
379700
7000
06:26
60,000 species are known to science,
63
386700
4000
06:30
but more than 1.5 million have been estimated to exist.
64
390700
4000
06:34
Consider the nematode roundworm, the most abundant of all animals.
65
394700
6000
06:40
Four out of five animals on Earth are nematode worms --
66
400700
8000
06:48
if all solid materials except nematode worms were to be eliminated,
67
408700
4000
06:52
you could still see the ghostly outline of most of it in nematode worms.
68
412700
7000
06:59
About 16,000 species of nematode worms
69
419700
5000
07:04
have been discovered and diagnosed by scientists;
70
424700
3000
07:07
there could be hundreds of thousands of them, even millions, still unknown.
71
427700
5000
07:12
This vast domain of hidden biodiversity is increased still further
72
432700
5000
07:17
by the dark matter of the biological world of bacteria,
73
437700
6000
07:23
which within just the last several years
74
443700
6000
07:29
still were known from only about 6,000 species of bacteria worldwide.
75
449700
7000
07:36
But that number of bacteria species can be found in one gram of soil,
76
456700
6000
07:42
just a little handful of soil, in the 10 billion bacteria that would be there.
77
462700
9000
07:51
It's been estimated that a single ton of soil -- fertile soil --
78
471700
5000
07:56
contains approximately four million species of bacteria, all unknown.
79
476700
8000
08:04
So the question is: what are they all doing?
80
484700
8000
08:12
The fact is, we don't know.
81
492700
3000
08:15
We are living on a planet with a lot of activities, with reference to our living environment,
82
495700
9000
08:24
done by faith and guess alone.
83
504700
4000
08:28
Our lives depend upon these creatures.
84
508700
4000
08:32
To take an example close to home: there are over 500 species of bacteria now known --
85
512700
8000
08:40
friendly bacteria -- living symbiotically in your mouth and throat
86
520700
5000
08:45
probably necessary to your health for holding off pathogenic bacteria.
87
525700
7000
08:52
At this point I think we have a little impressionistic film
88
532700
4000
08:56
that was made especially for this occasion.
89
536700
2000
08:58
And I'd like to show it.
90
538700
2000
09:01
Assisted in this by Billie Holiday.
91
541700
3000
09:04
(Video)
92
544700
122000
11:06
And that may be just the beginning!
93
666700
3000
11:09
The viruses, those quasi-organisms among which are the prophages,
94
669700
6000
11:15
the gene weavers that promote the continued evolution in the lives of the bacteria,
95
675700
7000
11:22
are a virtually unknown frontier of modern biology, a world unto themselves.
96
682700
9000
11:31
What constitutes a viral species is still unresolved,
97
691700
4000
11:35
although they're obviously of enormous importance to us.
98
695700
4000
11:39
But this much we can say: the variety of genes on the planet in viruses
99
699700
6000
11:45
exceeds, or is likely to exceed, that in all of the rest of life combined.
100
705700
7000
11:53
Nowadays, in addressing microbial biodiversity,
101
713700
3000
11:57
scientists are like explorers in a rowboat launched onto the Pacific Ocean.
102
717700
6000
12:03
But that is changing rapidly with the aid of new genomic technology.
103
723700
5000
12:08
Already it is possible to sequence the entire genetic code of a bacterium in under four hours.
104
728700
7000
12:15
Soon we will be in a position to go forth in the field with sequencers on our backs --
105
735700
6000
12:21
to hunt bacteria in tiny crevices of the habitat's surface
106
741700
6000
12:27
in the way you go watching for birds with binoculars.
107
747700
4000
12:31
What will we find as we map the living world, as, finally, we get this underway seriously?
108
751700
8000
12:39
As we move past the relatively gigantic mammals, birds, frogs and plants
109
759700
5000
12:44
to the more elusive insects and other small invertebrates and then beyond
110
764700
6000
12:50
to the countless millions of organisms in the invisible living world
111
770700
5000
12:55
enveloped and living within humanity?
112
775700
4000
12:59
Already what were thought to be bacteria for generations
113
779700
6000
13:05
have been found to compose, instead, two great domains of microorganisms:
114
785700
6000
13:11
true bacteria and one-celled organisms the archaea,
115
791700
4000
13:15
which are closer than other bacteria to the eukaryota, the group that we belong to.
116
795700
7000
13:22
Some serious biologists, and I count myself among them,
117
802700
5000
13:27
have begun to wonder that among the enormous and still unknown diversity of microorganisms,
118
807700
9000
13:36
one might -- just might -- find aliens among them.
119
816700
5000
13:41
True aliens, stocks that arrived from outer space.
120
821700
5000
13:46
They've had billions of years to do it,
121
826700
2000
13:48
but especially during the earliest period of biological evolution on this planet.
122
828700
7000
13:55
We do know that some bacterial species that have earthly origin
123
835700
4000
13:59
are capable of almost unimaginable extremes of temperature
124
839700
8000
14:07
and other harsh changes in environment,
125
847700
2000
14:10
including hard radiation strong enough and maintained long enough to crack the Pyrex vessels
126
850700
8000
14:18
around the growing population of bacteria.
127
858700
3000
14:21
There may be a temptation to treat the biosphere holistically
128
861700
6000
14:27
and the species that compose it as a great flux of entities
129
867700
6000
14:33
hardly worth distinguishing one from the other.
130
873700
4000
14:37
But each of these species, even the tiniest Prochlorococci,
131
877700
5000
14:42
are masterpieces of evolution.
132
882700
2000
14:44
Each has persisted for thousands to millions of years.
133
884700
6000
14:50
Each is exquisitely adapted to the environment in which it lives,
134
890700
4000
14:54
interlocked with other species to form ecosystems upon which our own lives depend
135
894700
7000
15:01
in ways we have not begun even to imagine.
136
901700
4000
15:05
We will destroy these ecosystems and the species composing them
137
905700
4000
15:09
at the peril of our own existence --
138
909700
3000
15:12
and unfortunately we are destroying them with ingenuity and ceaseless energy.
139
912700
9000
15:21
My own epiphany as a conservationist came in 1953, while a Harvard graduate student,
140
921700
10000
15:31
searching for rare ants found in the mountain forests of Cuba,
141
931700
3000
15:35
ants that shine in the sunlight --
142
935700
2000
15:37
metallic green or metallic blue, according to species, and one species, I discovered, metallic gold.
143
937700
8000
15:45
I found my magical ants, but only after a tough climb into the mountains
144
945700
5000
15:50
where the last of the native Cuban forests hung on,
145
950700
4000
15:54
and were then -- and still are -- being cut back.
146
954700
6000
16:00
I realized then that these species
147
960700
3000
16:03
and a large part of the other unique, marvelous animals and plants on that island --
148
963700
6000
16:09
and this is true of practically every part of the world --
149
969700
5000
16:14
which took millions of years to evolve, are in the process of disappearing forever.
150
974700
5000
16:19
And so it is everywhere one looks.
151
979700
5000
16:24
The human juggernaut is permanently eroding Earth's ancient biosphere by a combination of forces
152
984700
8000
16:32
that can be summarized by the acronym "HIPPO," the animal hippo.
153
992700
5000
16:37
H is for habitat destruction, including climate change forced by greenhouse gases.
154
997700
7000
16:44
I is for the invasive species like the fire ants, the zebra mussels, broom grasses
155
1004700
8000
16:52
and pathogenic bacteria and viruses that are flooding every country, and at an exponential rate -- that's the I.
156
1012700
11000
17:03
The P, the first one in "HIPPO," is for pollution.
157
1023700
4000
17:07
The second is for continued population, human population expansion.
158
1027700
6000
17:13
And the final letter is O, for over-harvesting --
159
1033700
3000
17:16
driving species into extinction by excessive hunting and fishing.
160
1036700
4000
17:20
The HIPPO juggernaut we have created, if unabated, is destined --
161
1040700
6000
17:26
according to the best estimates of ongoing biodiversity research --
162
1046700
4000
17:30
to reduce half of Earth's still surviving animal and plant species
163
1050700
5000
17:35
to extinction or critical endangerment by the end of the century.
164
1055700
5000
17:40
Human-forced climate change alone -- again, if unabated --
165
1060700
5000
17:45
could eliminate a quarter of surviving species during the next five decades.
166
1065700
6000
17:51
What will we and all future generations lose
167
1071700
4000
17:55
if much of the living environment is thus degraded?
168
1075700
4000
18:01
Huge potential sources of scientific information yet to be gathered,
169
1081700
4000
18:05
much of our environmental stability
170
1085700
4000
18:09
and new kinds of pharmaceuticals and new products of unimaginable strength and value --
171
1089700
7000
18:16
all thrown away.
172
1096700
3000
18:19
The loss will inflict a heavy price
173
1099700
3000
18:22
in wealth, security and yes, spirituality for all time to come,
174
1102700
7000
18:29
because previous cataclysms of this kind --
175
1109700
2000
18:31
the last one, that ended the age of dinosaurs --
176
1111700
2000
18:34
took, normally, five to 10 million years to repair.
177
1114700
6000
18:40
Sadly, our knowledge of biodiversity is so incomplete
178
1120700
4000
18:44
that we are at risk of losing a great deal of it before it is even discovered.
179
1124700
5000
18:49
For example, even in the United States, the 200,000 species known currently
180
1129700
9000
18:58
actually has been found to be only partial in coverage;
181
1138700
7000
19:05
it is mostly unknown to us in basic biology.
182
1145700
5000
19:10
Only about 15 percent of the known species have been studied well enough to evaluate their status.
183
1150700
7000
19:17
Of the 15 percent evaluated, 20 percent are classified as "in peril,"
184
1157700
6000
19:23
that is, in danger of extinction.
185
1163700
2000
19:25
That's in the United States.
186
1165700
2000
19:27
We are, in short, flying blind into our environmental future.
187
1167700
7000
19:34
We urgently need to change this.
188
1174700
2000
19:36
We need to have the biosphere properly explored
189
1176700
4000
19:40
so that we can understand and competently manage it.
190
1180700
4000
19:44
We need to settle down before we wreck the planet.
191
1184700
4000
19:48
And we need that knowledge.
192
1188700
1000
19:49
This should be a big science project equivalent to the Human Genome Project.
193
1189700
5000
19:54
It should be thought of as a biological moonshot with a timetable.
194
1194700
5000
19:59
So this brings me to my wish for TEDsters,
195
1199700
4000
20:03
and to anyone else around the world who hears this talk.
196
1203700
3000
20:06
I wish we will work together to help create the key tools
197
1206700
6000
20:12
that we need to inspire preservation of Earth's biodiversity.
198
1212700
4000
20:16
And let us call it the "Encyclopedia of Life."
199
1216700
4000
20:20
What is the "Encyclopedia of Life?" A concept that has already taken hold
200
1220700
4000
20:24
and is beginning to spread and be looked at seriously?
201
1224700
4000
20:28
It is an encyclopedia that lives on the Internet
202
1228700
3000
20:31
and is contributed to by thousands of scientists around the world.
203
1231700
5000
20:36
Amateurs can do it also.
204
1236700
3000
20:39
It has an indefinitely expandable page for each species.
205
1239700
5000
20:44
It makes all key information about life on Earth accessible to anyone,
206
1244700
6000
20:50
on demand, anywhere in the world.
207
1250700
2000
20:52
I've written about this idea before,
208
1252700
4000
20:56
and I know there are people in this room who have expended significant effort on it in the past.
209
1256700
7000
21:03
But what excites me is that since I first put forward this particular idea in that form,
210
1263700
8000
21:11
science has advanced.
211
1271700
2000
21:13
Technology has moved forward.
212
1273700
3000
21:16
Today, the practicalities of making such an encyclopedia,
213
1276700
4000
21:20
regardless of the magnitude of the information put into it, are within reach.
214
1280700
6000
21:26
Indeed, in the past year, a group of influential scientific institutions
215
1286700
4000
21:30
have begun mobilizing to realize this dream.
216
1290700
4000
21:34
I wish you would help them.
217
1294700
3000
21:37
Working together, we can make this real.
218
1297700
3000
21:41
The encyclopedia will quickly pay for itself in practical applications.
219
1301700
5000
21:46
It will address transcendent qualities in the human consciousness, and sense of human need.
220
1306700
6000
21:52
It will transform the science of biology in ways of obvious benefit to humanity.
221
1312700
6000
21:58
And most of all, it can inspire a new generation of biologists
222
1318700
5000
22:03
to continue the quest that started, for me personally, 60 years ago:
223
1323700
5000
22:08
to search for life, to understand it and finally, above all, to preserve it.
224
1328700
5000
22:13
That is my wish. Thank you.
225
1333700
2000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7