How Life on Earth Adapts to You and Me | Shane Campbell-Staton | TED

48,403 views ・ 2023-07-05

TED


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So I'm an evolutionary biologist.
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The thing I love most about evolution is the story.
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Evolution is a single story that links every species,
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every branch in the tree of life together.
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It's this sense of connectivity with the rest of the living world.
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It's like one of the reasons why I became a biologist in the first place.
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Now, when Charles Darwin, my man Chuck D,
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when he first proposed this theory ...
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(Laughter)
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When he first proposed the theory of evolution,
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he imagined it as this slow, gradual process
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that played out over thousands or millions of years.
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But now, in the face of all the different changes
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that we are making to the planet,
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we're finding that evolution is rapidly altering species around our planet
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in order to live alongside us.
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And in our short time on this planet,
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we have trimmed, trained
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and reshuffled the tree of life at breakneck speed.
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10,000 years ago,
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we had already learned how to manipulate the basic building blocks of life,
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turning wild plants and animals into domesticated forms
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to use for our own purposes.
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With mass global transportation,
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we've reshuffled species around the globe,
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bringing them together and forming all new ecological interactions.
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And on top of that,
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we've fundamentally altered Earth's surface and its climate
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through industrialized agriculture, urbanization,
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pollution and global warming.
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Now I've dedicated my life to trying to understand
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the lasting biological impacts of our human footprint.
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One of the things that I've learned along the way is that life is a paradox.
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It's simultaneously incredibly fragile
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and relentlessly resilient.
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The thing that impresses me most
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is that despite our devastating impacts on this planet,
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I'm constantly in awe of the surprising, incredible,
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amazing ways that life is changing,
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evolving and adapting
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to a time that's literally defined by our species' impact on the planet.
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We now live in a time where one half of the human species lives in cities.
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As urban areas grow and expand,
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life around the world,
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non-human life, is changing
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to figure out how to exploit the novel resources
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and avoid the potential dangers.
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My research group and my colleagues have been studying these small lizards
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called anoles
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that occur across the island of Puerto Rico.
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Now, most of the time,
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these lizards spend their time running up and down trees,
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chasing after insects, doing the things you know, that lizards do.
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But in cities, they have evolved at the genetic level.
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They've evolved longer limbs and larger sticky toe pads
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to utilize the sides of buildings
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and artificial surfaces like glass and metal and concrete as their homes.
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They've also evolved greater heat tolerance
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to deal with the high temperatures that define dense urban environments,
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what we call urban heat islands.
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And what's more, is that multiple populations of this species
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have come up with the same solutions over and over again, independently.
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Showing us that not only is the process of evolution very rapid sometimes,
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but in some cases it can also be quite predictable.
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Now, urbanization is not our only impact on this planet,
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far from it.
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Perhaps our earliest and longest-lasting impact
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has been through our want and need
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to hunt other species for food and for sport.
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I spent the last few years studying the evolution of African elephants
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in response to ivory poaching.
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In Mozambique,
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there was a civil war from 1977 to 1992.
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During this time, in Gorongosa National Park,
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elephants in particular were reduced by 90 percent
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because of the ivory trade, being targeted for their trademark tusks.
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Now, under most circumstances, African elephants have tusks,
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all males have tusks,
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the vast majority of females have tusks.
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But there is a small number of females that carry a gene
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that prevents them from growing their tusks.
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But after the Mozambican Civil War,
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one-half of the surviving females, completely tuskless.
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Now, during a time where individuals are being hunted
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specifically for a trait,
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having tusks,
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not having that trait puts you at a decided advantage
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in your ability to survive.
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That in and of itself is natural selection.
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Those surviving females then went on
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and passed that gene on to many of their daughters.
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That turnover of genes across generations,
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that is rapid evolution
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in this long-lived species in response to a decade and a half
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of human hunting.
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I remember going to Gorongosa for the first time
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and participating in these elephant captures
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where we collar these individuals
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and collect data and track their movements.
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And we came across this female,
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and she's old enough where we know that she had survived
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the Mozambican Civil War.
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Now we sedated this female and as we were there,
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sort of working up all of these data,
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looking into her big, groggy, sleepy eyes,
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and it really struck me, the impact that our species can have
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on the rest of the living world.
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This female, she lived during a time
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that saw nine out of ten of the members of her species slaughtered.
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But she survived.
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She grew up, she went on and had children, had grandchildren,
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became the matriarch of a family group.
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But what strikes me the most about this story
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is that the reason
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for all of that destruction and that slaughter
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was simply because
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humans like to make trinkets out of their teeth.
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Which is about the most
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ridiculous and sad thing I've ever had to say out loud.
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But we live in a time where even the simplest human whims
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can fundamentally alter the evolutionary fate
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of the largest land animal on our planet.
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And many of these stories of rapid evolution are sad,
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but some also offer us hope for our own future on this planet.
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In nature's struggle to deal with all the nonsense that we're throwing at her
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in all these different ways,
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some of those solutions may lead us to novel insights
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that may help our bodies
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deal with things that we currently struggle with
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that will allow us to survive all the different changes
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that we're making on this planet.
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For instance, fast forward to the year 2040,
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it's estimated that there will be about 30.2 million new cancer cases
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diagnosed in that year alone.
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Now, we know a lot about the genes and mutations
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that are responsible for many cancers
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or make an individual more predisposed to getting cancer.
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We know a lot less about potential genetic mutations or variation
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that may make an individual more resistant
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or more resilient to cancer.
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But perhaps nature has already found the solution.
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April 26th, 1986,
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the day before my very first birthday.
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There was an explosion in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.
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Humans were immediately evacuated from that region,
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what is now called the Chernobyl exclusion zone.
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But in the decades since,
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wildlife has actually moved into the Chernobyl exclusion zone
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and has proliferated.
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So my research group and colleagues,
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we have been studying the wolves that live in the Chernobyl exclusion zone,
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trying to understand how they have responded biologically
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to now generations of exposure to elevated radiation levels.
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Now, if we consider a wolf pup that's born in the Chernobyl exclusion zone,
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it lives every single day of its life, from the time it's born,
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gaining increased doses of exposure from its environment.
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With every meal that that animal eats,
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it then gets another dose of radiation from prey species.
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And we can see that radiation accumulating in this wolf population
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in the form of cesium-137.
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And one of the things that our data are showing us
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is that the fastest-changing regions of the Chernobyl wolf genome
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occur in and around genes that we know are involved in cancer
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or in the mammalian anti-tumor immune response.
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We're now working with biomedical companies
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and cancer biologists
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to understand the physiological impacts of these mutations
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with the hope that at least some of these changes
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may lead us to novel therapeutics
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that might result in new treatments for cancer in humans.
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In this grand story of life,
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we're writing a brand new chapter.
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Now our chapter in this story is not a pretty one, let's be honest.
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As a matter of fact, there's a distinct possibility
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that our species could bring about Earth's sixth major mass extinction event.
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So, you know, that sucks.
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(Laughter)
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It'd be messed up if I had just left the talk like that, I was like,
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"Hope you're all proud of yourselves, bye."
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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But luckily I don't have to leave the talk like that
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because this chapter is still being written.
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Our chapter in this story of life is still happening,
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which means that there are still many possibilities ahead of us.
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We have the possibility to act,
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the possibility to fight for those species
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that don't have the ability to fight for themselves.
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We have the possibility to turn our chapter in this story
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into one of redemption,
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one of hope and one of care for this epic legacy of life
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on this planet that we've inherited.
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A legacy, by the way, that's four billion years in the making.
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Which brings up the possibility that we can pass on a world to our kids
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and our grandkids
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so that they can enjoy and revel in the incredible biodiversity
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that the story of evolution has produced.
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What Charles Darwin referred to as “endless forms most beautiful.”
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One way or another, what we do matters.
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We live in a time
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when we are literally etching our decisions
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into the DNA of the species that live in, on and around us.
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When we're considering this story that we're writing,
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what do we want our chapter in this grand story of life to be?
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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