- Ecocide
The neologism Ecocide can be used to refer to any large-scale destruction of the environment. [Random House (2006) "Unabridged Dictionary" ] An early reference in 1969 described it as "Ecocide - the murder of the environment - is everybody's business." [ Encyclopedia Science Supplement 1969 ] The term was also used in relation to environmental damage due to war such as the the use of
defoliant s in theVietnam War . [Modern warfare equals environmental damage. USA Today Magazine, January 2008, Vol. 136 Issue 2752, p6-6,] Ecocide is also a term for a substance that kills enoughspecie s in anecosystem to disrupt its structure and function. [cite book
last = Cunningham
first = W
authorlink =
coauthors = et al
title = Environmental encyclopedia
publisher = Gale
date = 1998
location = Detroit
pages =
url =
doi =
id =
isbn = 0-8013-9314-X ] An example would be a high concentration of pesticide due to a spillage.Many, for example the U.S. environmental theorist and activist Patrick Hossayin Unsustainable A Primer for Global Environmental and Social Justice, Zed Books: London, 2006,see 'Ecocide' and 'Toxic Planet', pp. 22-34.] believe that the human species is committing ecocide, via industrial civilization's effects on the global environment. Much of the modern environmental movement stems from this belief as a precept. CriticsWho|date=May 2008 of the belief in ecocide usually assert that human impacts are not sufficiently serious as to threaten the Earth's ability to support complex life.
A weaker definition of ecocide is that in which an
organism destroysecosystem s other than its own. (e.g. cancer). For example, it could be said that during thePrecambrian era, blue-green algae committed ecocide upon the prevailing reducing-chemistry-based ecology, by releasing oxygen into the environment. Organisms to which oxygen was a poison, died off, while the algae and other organisms adapted to and created a new oxidation-chemistry-basedecology .According to this interpretation, humankind may be committing ecocide upon various ecological systems around the world, but the 'deaths' of these minor ecosystems do not materially impact our own survival. In this view, ecocide (of
rainforest s,coral reef s, the polarpack ice , islandhabitat zones, etc.) may be regrettable aesthetically or morally but not materially and economically.At the heart of the ecocide issue are practical and moral questions: is human activity destroying the ecological support system for our own survival (is global ecocide actually happening)?
ee also
*
Ecophagy
*Ecotage
*List of environmental issues References
Further reading
*cite book
last = Franz
first = Broswimmer
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = Ecocide: A Short History of Mass Extinction of Species
publisher = Pluto Press
date = 2002
location =
pages =
url =
doi =
id =
isbn = 0745319343
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