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1

Wagamaga OP t1_j47xang wrote

National parks are the backbone of conservation. Yet mounting evidence shows that many parks are too small to sustain long-term viable populations and maintain essential, large-scale ecological processes, such as large mammal migrations and natural disturbance regimes.

A new study published on Jan. 11, 2023, in Scientific Reports found that enhancing ecological connectivity, known as “corridors” or “linkages,” among several of the oldest and largest national parks in the Western United States would greatly extend the time that many mammal species populations can persist. The authors analyzed the value of establishing ecological corridors for large mammals between Yellowstone and Glacier National Parks and between Mount Rainier and North Cascades National Parks. Their findings show that these corridors would not only enlarge populations, but also allow species to shift their geographic ranges more readily in response to climate change.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-26428-z

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Acrobatic_Switches t1_j48b1dn wrote

Can't even get wildlife bridges across highways. I'm all for it but this is a massive leap through a lot of bureaucratic holes.

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PriorTable8265 t1_j48er77 wrote

Rewilding unproductive subsidized land is a double win. We're throwing away over half the food we produce in this country. I think we can give some acreage back to nature.

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youll_dig-dug t1_j48fuoh wrote

If we didn't write come up perhaps we could get monkeys, I would love to have monkeys

−12

Martholomeow t1_j48v1ue wrote

Kim Stanley Robinson’s Ministry For The Future proves right again

−1

BBQcupcakes t1_j490xot wrote

Yeah idk this feels like you've been taken by a popular narrative. You really think the difference in ideas is so dependent on age? Not my experience, anecdotally, though I don't hang with a lot of old people.

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TheGreat_War_Machine t1_j4946hx wrote

From an economic perspective, waste doesn't mean anything if the product has already been paid for. Prices won't go up if it's the consumer that is throwing away the product after they have already paid for it.

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Kickstand8604 t1_j49ay14 wrote

Yea, anyone who's in undergrad for biology will probably come across corridors in an ecology class. Its all about who owns the land...just look at the checkerboard land plots between BLM and the ranchers/land owners in wyoming

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PoppaJMI t1_j49d5w9 wrote

Would like to see larger chunks of BLM land in southern Michigan.

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FriedRiceAndMath t1_j49glwf wrote

“ecological bridges under the highways”

Tunnels for wild animal traffic?? This would be so cool.

4

powercow t1_j49gqw2 wrote

sure it does, you still got to eat, thats more demand. Because i bought more tomatoes than I needed and threw some out and went to buy more, that was more tomato demand than if i bought just the right amount. That definitely does effect price.

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Archaris t1_j49hy0z wrote

High-tension power lines and natural gas pipelines already cut swathes across the landscape; it'd be great if those same corridors could be naturalized with native species that support year-round wildlife instead of thistles and thorns to deter interlopers.

Imagine if landowners along these corridors were given some financial incentive (infrastructure bill) to regrow some hardwoods like hickory and oaks like US used to have all over the place.

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Worriedrph t1_j49j278 wrote

That corridor in Washington looks like a ton of land. Seems a little unrealistic to me.

3

PensiveObservor t1_j49ueba wrote

We're talking wildlife corridors, right? Bird enthusiasts are trying hard to keep what flyways exist for migrating birds, as more and more development scrubs out viable wetland and natural terrain. I hope this corridor awareness spreads and takes hold before it's too late.

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Xalibu2 t1_j49xlwn wrote

I mean we built freeways and “parks” on their land. Shaped the world to suit our needs. Imagine growing up in a short time frame to not only have everything change but almost become hostile to your way of life. We must and should endeavor to provide proper pathways to our wildlife. Seems like all we care about these days is the meat animals we keep. It’s not a good process and shameful at the least.

2

xWormZx t1_j49yekx wrote

Well yes. An overwhelming majority of people under 30 in the US vote democratic. Also, idea that people begin to vote for more conservative politicians as they age used to be true, but has recently began to stop being true. So if current patterns hold, the vast majority of the country will vote Democrat in the years to come. Both of these ideas are searchable online.

11

Bretters17 t1_j4a1epk wrote

The IIJA (Infrastructure Act) passed last year includes $8+ billion for wildlife and wildlife crossings. Most new highways and road are being planned with some sort of wildlife crossings - usually underpasses - but the overpasses will become more common when possible.

Handy PDF summary here

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Such_Strategy_CO t1_j4a1pes wrote

Protected is the key. Ranchers and farmers won't like wildlife from far off being near and have the right to keep their property and assets safe so it's a problem.

3

CogitoErgoScum t1_j4a3u5g wrote

Since something like half of the land in the US west of the Rockies is federal, go right on ahead fells, I’m not standing in your way.

Oh right. Your bff got the mining/petroleum/grazing/water rights. I see how it is.

6

Robotlolz t1_j4a5hos wrote

I think the biggest wake up call is going to be when the boomers die off and we realize that selfishness, greed, racism, and every other bad thing we attribute to them aren’t a generational thing but a human being thing

17

Content_Flamingo_583 t1_j4a84f8 wrote

> the consumer that is throwing away the product after they have already paid for it.

Most food is wasted by corporations, not consumers. If they can’t sell it for a profit, they would rather it go in the garbage than be given to someone in need.

https://www.biologicaldiversity.org/news/press_releases/2018/grocery-waste-04-16-2018.php

https://www.mic.com/impact/inside-the-tiktok-trend-shaming-corporations-for-destroying-perfectly-good-stuff-48292822

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Content_Flamingo_583 t1_j4a8nit wrote

Increased demand doesn’t always raise price, due to economies of scale, and the fact that the supply can be elastic and adjusted based on demand.

Think about it, if most people who ate tomatoes now stopped eating tomatoes, would the prices of tomatoes go up or down in the long run?

Sure, in the short term there would be a glut, and the price would go down. But then the supply itself would shrink. Tomatoes would become a ‘niche’ vegetable, like an exotic fruit, and the lack of scale would mean that they would be more expensive on the whole.

It’s the same reason why increased demand for novel consumer products like computers or smart phones pushes the price down in the long run. The increased demand results in the production of greater supply, and due to economies of scale, that item becomes cheaper on the whole.

All this is to say, if we all bought half as much food, production would shrink, and the price would effectively stay the same for us at the consumer level.

6

Content_Flamingo_583 t1_j4a9t0x wrote

If you buy less of a company’s product, that company just produces less of it for sale. The price would stay the same.

(The price may even go up, because of a reduction of the economy of scale).

However, you would personally save money by simple virtue of the fact that you’re buying less of the product.

Which is to say, pro tip: You can save money by not wasting food you buy.

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Its_0ver t1_j4aaqby wrote

The food that was purchased by the consumer and then thrown away has to get replaced by new food right? So by replacing food that we threw away we artificially increasing demand. More demand+same production = increased prices

2

TikkiTakiTomtom t1_j4aaz1q wrote

> Establishing expanded protected area network… would greatly enlarge available habitat

Am I missing something or does that sound really redundant?

1

Yorgonemarsonb t1_j4acn1f wrote

They need to get ahead of the fences that are going to end up trapping a lot of wildlife during fires over the next few decades as well.

0

Stoliana12 t1_j4ad0ud wrote

Lemme shorten this:

Animals don’t care what lines you draw on a map.

Nor do they understand why one toe past a random point is suddenly getting them and their collective murdered

0

voidsong t1_j4adknr wrote

I remember reading a panther study in Florida, the biggest killer by far was crossing roads. Just putting in animal overpasses would make a huge difference for most wildlife.

5

FreezeOnFluster t1_j4aeisg wrote

If you're interested in such habitats, there is a project in Germany called 'the green belt' which created a protected wild life corridor along the old border between the fromer GDR and western Germany. The project is planned to include more european countries and will then be called 'the european belt'. Link for more infos on the green belt: https://www.bund.net/service/publikationen/detail/publication/the-green-belt-long-term-work-for-a-vision/

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spiritbx t1_j4aej2a wrote

So they want to make animal highways?

1

boonlinka t1_j4ag7rj wrote

Its almost as if Native American tribes have been advocating for this for centuries… hm. Maybe we should have been listened to for environmental knowledge

0

boonlinka t1_j4agge0 wrote

National Parks are rooted in displacing Indigenous people, the communities who have been sheppards and protectors of nature for centuries. Theyre definitely NOT founded for the purpose of perserving the environment because if it was, they would have lef the land much more untouched with its Native people still living off the land. I’d suggest doing more research on early conservationist’s stances on Native Americans and the exploitable potential for the land they were living on and conserving.

−15

Kflynn1337 t1_j4ai9ts wrote

Just one question though... how are the animals going to know where these corridors are? I mean, it's not like they read maps or signs...

I would hope the first step in creating this network of linked wild places would involve studying the actual patterns of movement, then put in the wild corridors by following the creatures 'desire paths'.

−2

sn0wmermaid t1_j4ake94 wrote

Almost all of the land in the cascades is owned by either NPS or the US forest service. It's somewhat well connected with large bottomless culverts/tunnels on a ton of roads and there's a huge new wildlife crossing bridge over the freeway as well.

6

mehraaza t1_j4alqnh wrote

I actually work with these exact issues but in Sweden!

Here the corridors that infrastructure creates are utilized to increase connectivity between fields and open grasslands, which is a type of nature that's increasingly scarce here. The power line infrastructures clear any trees over a certain height to ensure safety and maintenance, but the grass and shrubbery is managed to promote habitats for insects, small birds, and endangered flora that likes open grasslands. This is possible because the power grid is state owned for the most part, and the state is responsible for the maintenance and not the land owner.

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ashenblade t1_j4an9jd wrote

"There is a crime here that goes beyond denunciation. There is a sorrow here that weeping cannot symbolize. There is a failure here that topples all our success. The fertile earth, the straight tree rows, the sturdy trunks, and the ripe fruit. And children dying of pellagra must die because a profit cannot be taken from an orange.

And coroners must fill in the certificate- died of malnutrition- because the food must rot, must be forced to rot. The people come with nets to fish for potatoes in the river, and the guards hold them back; they come in rattling cars to get the dumped oranges, but the kerosene is sprayed.

And they stand still and watch the potatoes float by, listen to the screaming pigs being killed in a ditch and covered with quick-lime, watch the mountains of oranges slop down to a putrefying ooze; and in the eyes of the people there is the failure; and in the eyes of the hungry there is a growing wrath. In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage."

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jm9160 t1_j4anfl7 wrote

All national parks should aim for natural corridors for animals to move between. This should be the goal

3

Joey3155 t1_j4anhk4 wrote

There's two reasons why corporations waste food.

When I was younger I used to work at 7-11 one night I was working with my general manager (owner's brother) and I had throw away the entire shelf of those little 7-11 breakfast sandwiches it was a good 40-50 of them. I asked my manager why we don't donate this stuff to people in need. He responded because corporate (not the franchise owner) wouldn't allow it because they don't want to run afoul of New York state law which actually has rules about how long establishments can keep certain kinds of food for the sandwiches the limit is 24 hrs from the time of delivery.

I worked at White Castle after that and I worked night shift so I had to go into the refridgerator and freezer and prep them for delivery, help the delivery guy unload the truck, etc. One of the things I did was throw away all of the food waste and then report what I threw away. I got stuck doing this unironically because I was honest and didn't steal. One day threw a good several large shovel full of hamburgers that couldn't have been more then 20 mins old but because of corporate policy we had to get rid of them I threw a good 1200 dollars of food away that night and then reported the items so they could become a tax write off.

People have idea how much food is thrown out by the food service industry and I'm scare to ask about the agriculture industry I'm gonna assume it's even more.

1

Joey3155 t1_j4ao74v wrote

Except it doesn't work that way. If I sell something to a customer and give it to them I have to order more food regardless. It doesn't matter if the customer eats it or has a 50 hooker gangbang with cheeseburger pasties. From the business's point of view we sold product, we have to order more inventory, wait for it to come, restock said inventory. Whether the paying customer wastes the food or not after paying is irrelevant.

Your argument would make sense if the waste occurred before the customer paid for it. But after the transaction is complete it really is irrelevant.

−1

VdoubleU88 t1_j4aql4o wrote

I live in a “small” town on the Front Range in CO. Residential development is booming at an insane rate here — there are at least 6 massive neighborhoods that have popped up in the last 2 years within only a 3 mile radius of my house. 4 of the 6 neighborhoods were built directly in the middle of native grassland that is an essential part of the elk migration path, despite cries of warning from environmentalists…. And now people wonder why they have mountain lion, bear, and elk in their backyards. It absolutely kills me to see what we are doing to our planet, and my heart breaks for the wildlife I see every day paying the price.

7

LudSable t1_j4asrn5 wrote

Indeed... Otherwise national parks are more like giant enclosed "zoos" separating other animals from human society. Wildlife crossings are similarly important outside of them.

2

Elhaym t1_j4bbpa6 wrote

A customer that eats 100% of what they order will order far less than a customer that eats 10% of what they order, assuming they have the same caloric needs.

1

SuperFrog4 t1_j4byy2v wrote

All I can think of when I saw this was that looney tunes cartoon where the sheep dog and the wolf know each other and talk and say hello before they both clock in together to start their day at work.

1

thomaspainesghost t1_j4c31bf wrote

Great! Maybe we can make a 500 mile buffer to keep wind turbines from being anywhere close while we are at it.

−1

Joey3155 t1_j4c8l4l wrote

But again from the standpoint of the restaurant it is irrelevant. They have a recommended inventory level they have to maintain and a certain amount of food waste that occurs even if sales are zero. The issue is not the customer but the restaurant itself and to a certain degree the laws and policy they have to abide by. Plus if a customer pays for food in full the restaurant made their COGS plus their markup the economic impact as per the original context of the conversation is still zero. If you want to combat food waste and the socio-economic ramifications you need to focus on restaurants and their suppliers.

1

Kalapuya t1_j4cgahh wrote

But what about private property that’s in the way? Eminent domain isn’t exactly a popular practice.

1

Freshiiiiii t1_j4co4u5 wrote

The small-scale controlled burns lit by indigenous people contributed to increases in the variation and ‘patchiness’ of the available environment, creating increased habitat diversity and increased abundance of berries and other plants that like to live in forest margins, which enriched the regions for bears, other large mammals, and humans too, while also decreasing severe high-intensity wildfire incidence. It’s really not at all comparable to what’s changed in the last 400 years.

0

Freshiiiiii t1_j4csd54 wrote

And better still- if they connect Yellowstone to Glacier, well, Glacier is already connected to Waterton in Canada. And Jasper, Banff, Kutenai, and Yoho national parks in Canada are already very large and connected, and close to Waterton. Connect those to Waterton, and bam, you've got an amazing corridor going.

2