Global Institute of Sustainability

January 30, 2012

Dear Board Member,

To lead off the New Year, we present our second in a series of thought leader commentaries on sustainability issues. This month we feature Quentin Wheeler, a world-renowned expert on species exploration. On page two you will find our monthly briefing on recent sustainability news and activities.

thought leader series

Sustain What? Exploring Species for a Sustainable Future

by Quentin Wheeler

Several centuries of species exploration have taught us that a vast number of Earth’s plants and animals are extremely limited in their ecological associations and geographic distributions. When these species lose their specific habitats, it usually means extinction. Yet, because we don’t know what or how many species actually exist or where they live, we are unable to detect or measure these quiet changes in biodiversity.

Each unknown loss, however, compromises our ability to understand the origin and history of life on our planet. More importantly, these losses seriously impede our ability to adapt to a rapidly changing environment on Earth.

Since Carl Linnaeus inaugurated the modern age of taxonomy in 1758, nearly two million kinds of plants, animals, and microbes have been discovered, described, named, and classified. This sounds like a lot, but an estimated 10 million species of “higher” organisms remain unknown to science, and the number of unknown microbial species could be even greater. Beyond that, to paraphrase former U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, we don’t yet know what we don’t know about the living world around us.

Given all this, the hubris of writing laws and regulations to protect endangered species is laughable. How can we adapt agriculture to climate change or understand complex ecosystems while remaining ignorant of 90 percent of their functional parts? We have lived with this near-complete ignorance of species for so long that we fail to recognize that it need not be so.

What we need to do is invest in a mission to learn all species. We have this capability within our reach. Rather than settling for imprecise estimates of species diversity and untested ecosystem models, we must undertake a comprehensive inventory of every species on Earth. The benefits of completing such a taxonomic inventory would be immediate, profound, and enduring.

First, it would create baseline knowledge of the biosphere against which we could detect, monitor, and potentially respond to increases or decreases in biodiversity. The U.S. currently spends more than $130 billion per year mitigating the impacts of about 6,000 non-native species, but invests only a few million dollars in species exploration. With a more balanced approach, ecology could be empowered to explore the detailed interactions of organisms and detect invasive species before they become established, destructive, and costly.

Second, we would bequeath a legacy of biodiversity knowledge to future generations. Because there is little hope of manned space flights ever reaching a planet with more than a few microbes, our only hope for understanding organic evolution in depth is to gather, analyze, and preserve evidence of this history on Earth while we can. We will get no second chances.

Third, understanding biodiversity provides our best hope for finding ideas and inspiration to cope with environmental change. Natural selection has worked ceaselessly for 3.8 billion years to adapt species in sustainable ways to the challenges that humans face now. We need to open this vast library of sustainability options by exploring all the ways each species is unique. This effort would reveal the billions of ways in which other species successfully met climate and other challenges. The result could be the basis for a new kind of adaptive entrepreneurship based on time-proven strategies.

Now is the time. Advanced cyberinfrastructure has the potential to overcome every constraint that has held back rapid taxonomic advances in the past. No insurmountable scientific or technological barriers prevent a world species inventory, only political barriers. The enormous scale of the challenge will be dwarfed by the potential benefits to science and society.

Perhaps the greatest challenge will be to transform society’s outdated perception of taxonomy. ASU’s International Institute for Species Exploration is working to do that. The Institute is facilitating an international effort to accelerate species discovery, inspire the next generation of species explorers, create innovative tools that remove impediments to the growth of knowledge, and increase public awareness of the importance of natural history museums and the science of taxonomy.

About the author: Quentin Wheeler is a Senior Sustainability Scientist in the Global Institute of Sustainability, Virginia M. Ullman Professor of Natural History and the Environment in the School of Life Sciences and School of Sustainability, and founding director of the International Institute for Species Exploration at ASU. From 2007-2011 he was dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and university vice president. Before joining ASU in 2006, he was a professor of taxonomy at Cornell University, director of the division of environmental biology at the National Science Foundation, and keeper and head of entomology at London’s Natural History Museum. He writes a weekly feature on new species for The Observer in London, has named more than 100 new species, and has published and lectured extensively on the role of taxonomy in biodiversity exploration and conservation. He is author of the annual State of Observed Species report, which tracks newly discovered species around the world.

Highlights of ASU sustainability activities

  • ASU’s School of Sustainability, in partnership with the Army National Guard, has developed a graduate-level certificate program in sustainability leadership for soldiers and civilians in the U.S. Army, Army National Guard, and Army Reserve. For the program, the School provides online courses that cover sustainability tools and concepts that soldiers and civilian workers need to improve mission readiness and move closer to the military’s sustainability goals. The courses may also be applied toward a master’s degree in sustainability.
    Read more »

  • Sustainability Scientist Carlos Castillo-Chavez received a Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring in a special White House ceremony with President Obama. He was among nine individuals and eight organizations recognized for their mentoring. Castillo-Chavez, a mathematical epidemiologist, is the founding director of the Mathematical and Theoretical Biology Institute at ASU and a faculty member in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change and the School of Sustainability.
    Read more »

  • The Center for Sustainable Health at ASU’s Biodesign Institute was awarded a $3 million grant from Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust to expand the Center’s scope. The Center works to improve health outcomes and reduce the financial and human cost of disease. The grant will be used to focus on healthy aging – a core area of engagement for Piper Trust.
    Read more »

  • ASU is partnering with state and local agencies on two significant federal grants. Sustainability Scientist Harvey Bryan is the lead ASU researcher on a U.S. Department of Energy grant to the state of Arizona aimed at finding ways to lower the cost of rooftop solar installation. Sustainability Scientists Arnim Wiek and Aaron Golub head an ASU team working on a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development grant that was awarded to the city of Phoenix to promote transit-oriented development along the Phoenix area light rail line.
    Read solar » | Read transit »

  • Four ASU students have been named College Entrepreneurs of the Year for 2011 by Entrepreneur Magazine. Their company, G3Box, focuses on turning discarded shipping containers into portable maternity clinics that can be shipped to countries with high maternal mortality rates. G3Box participates in ASU’s Edson student accelerator, which provides funding, mentoring, and office space to help students advance their ventures. Two other Edson-supported ventures from ASU were finalists in the contest.
    Read more »

  • ASU sustainability experts played a major role in producing the three-volume set, “The Business of Sustainability: Trends, Policies, Practices, and Stories of Success.” Sustainability Scientists George Basile and James C. Hershauer served as both editors and chapter writers. In addition, 12 other ASU-associated sustainability experts contributed chapters. The books combine key concepts with practical examples to explain how businesses can become more sustainable.
    Read more »

Please feel free to email or call us with any questions or comments about this briefing.


Best regards,

Rob Melnick

Sander van der Leeuw

Executive Dean
rob.melnick@asu.edu
480-965-5233

Dean
vanderle@asu.edu
480-965-6214

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