The impacts of biodiversity loss is not a well-researched topic in EA. A small group of us have begun doing some research into the impacts of biodiversity loss (including mass extinction and its connection to ecosystem collapse) as a potential cause area that deserves more attention and resources.
After preliminary research we found very little active research within the EA community about this topic and only minor explorations from core EA organizations. If you know of substantial, recent research on this topic we would love to read it.
As a quick way to help our community by contributing to an under-explored topic, we invite you to fill out this 3 minute survey or respond in the comments to the question:
What is the strongest argument you know of for & against biodiversity loss as a cause area?
We also want to acknowledge that we have seen substantial research into climate change. We believe biodiversity loss warrants its own targeted research as a separate but related trigger for compounding devastating risk for life on Earth.
I enjoy this prompt to add a few thoughts into this thread, it inspired me to think in a new direction. These thoughts aren't a direct response to the prompt, rather some thinking around the edges.
I already see cause areas as interconnected areas of interest, and as EAs 'define' a cause area, we are creating a distinction that says that this area/theory of change is meaningfully different from others. This kind of categorical thinking feels less useful for me when describing overlapping fields, which are strongly connected through a myriad of relationships. The comparisons between the 'cause areas' of climate change vs wild animal wellfare vs biodiversity loss are meaningfully different lenses of (what feels to me) the same territory.
So I mentally rephrase the question into something like: If one cares about life on Earth, what do we see through the lens of biodiversity?
What I'm seeing (as I sit on my front porch in downtown Toronto), is a vast web/network - of inter-related individuals and species, each playing a role in an ecosystem in balance (more or less). I can imagine over time, more and more of the nodes disappearing, causing many relationships to disappear. From network theory, this loss of redundancy may increase the fragility of the overall system, and shifting the overall network dynamics in often non-linear and unpredictable ways.
How many nodes can be removed before the autopoiesis* fails?
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What other things do EAs see if we look at planetary health through the lens of biodiversity? What are the blindspots inherent in viewing 'planetary health' through other "certified EA cause area" lenses?
Shameless plug: I'm interested in helping parts of EA to talk to one another, and in having EA interact with other movements also making the world a better place. If you like looking at the interconnections between things, and integrating different models into meta-models, feel free to reach out to me!
*Autopoiesis refers to a system capable of producing and maintaining itself by creating its own parts