
There are several reasons that humans cannot play the role of "gardeners and zookeepers" as envisioned by Smith and Gow. First, the magnitude of the problem is far beyond our ability to manage. The Earth contains tens of millions of species, most that remain undescribed. These species and their ecosystems are excruciatingly complex, and this complexity will for the foreseeable future remain well outside of the realm of human comprehension. To pretend that we can manage the Earth's diversity and ecosystems to mitigate effects of global warming is delusional. Second, the gardener and zookeeper approach would by necessity focus on the most obvious ecosystem components, charismatic fauna and flora such as grizzly bears and giant sequoias, condors and saguaros. Managing even these relatively few and well-studied taxa would be an immense undertaking and this targeted approach would completely ignore the myriad other, less conspicuous taxa that often are at least as important as the charismatic species in determining ecosystem structure and function. And third, playing the role of the Earth's gardener and zookeeper requires understanding how ecosystems function, and to be blunt, we haven't a clue. A well-informed ecologist might be able to provide a rough sketch of how a corn field functions, but when it comes to natural, complex ecosystems, forget it. Even our best attempts to manage this diversity would do far more harm than good.
Our best hope of mitigating the effects of climate change is not frantic, poorly-informed attempts to manage the consequences, but instead to deal seriously and immediately with the driver of global warming: the build-up of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the Earth's atmosphere. Despite the enormity of that task, it pales in comparison to what would be required to manage the Earth's fauna and flora to mitigate the effects of climate change. No matter how effective the response of human societies is to rising greenhouse gas emissions, global warming will accelerate for decades to come. As these resulting changes to the Earth's ecosystems unfold, we'll have little choice but to watch.
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