Animals, Fossils Offer Clues to Environmental Change
Mike O'Sullivan
Los Angeles
01 Sep 2004, 16:19 UTC
O'Sullivan report - Download 807k (RealAudio)
Scientists worldwide are tracking changes in our natural environment to
better understand issues like global warming. Researchers at the
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles say some changes are natural and
others are caused by humans, and the challenge is to distinguish
between the two.
The scientists are part of a global effort to track changes in the
atmosphere and oceans by monitoring plant and animal populations.
Leslie Harris is the Los Angeles Natural History Museum's collections
manager for polychaetes, which are segmented worms equipped with
bristles. Polychaetes come in many sizes and are common in the ocean,
and Ms. Harris says they serve as a barometer of ocean health.
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Researcher Leslie Harris examining a polychaete from the MekongDelta,Vietnam (VOA photo - M. O'Sullivan) |
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"For example, if we go out to the Hyperion sewage plant, they have an
ocean discharge of the sewage from the city of Los Angeles," she said.
"They pump out millions and millions of gallons of sewage every day.
Well, if you take samples of the sea bottom and then identify and count
the animals that are in the sediments, you'll find that polychaetes
often dominate. And by looking at the types of polychaetes and where
they live, we see how much of an effect there is from the outfall and
how far it reaches."
Some of the bristled sea worms actually thrive on processed wastewater,
but the creatures may also be harmed by escaping contaminants.
While some scientists study living creatures, others turn to the fossil
record for clues about the earth's past climate. Temperatures have
shifted dramatically over the ages, and paleontologists see evidence of
that. Luis Chiappe, curator of Vertebrate Paleontology at the museum,
first studied dinosaurs in his native Argentina. In 1997, he
co-discovered a large collection of fossilized dinosaur eggs in the
Patagonia region. Today he is studying the remains of an ancient
Tyrannosaurus Rex from the eastern part of the U.S. state of Montana.
He says fossilized plants and animals from the Mesozoic era reveal a
very different climate from today's. Now, eastern Montana, where this
dinosaur was found, has hot summers and cold winters, but 65 million
years ago, conditions were very different.
"It was a lot warmer than today, and essentially tropical forests
formed the shores of a seaway, because at the time, there was a seaway
that connected the Gulf of Mexico with the Arctic," he said. "And T-Rex
and other dinosaurs, triceratops and so on, they all lived on the
western side of the coastal plains of the seaway."
Over time, the earth has experienced ice ages alternating with periods
of global warming. Paleontologist Ken Johnson says the shells of
ancient mollusks found near Los Angeles illustrate that history.
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Jar of specimens (Photo courtesy - Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County) |
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"And we study them because they act as ancient thermometers," he said.
"They show us what the ocean temperatures were like in the past."
During the ice ages, mollusks now found in Alaska lived near Los
Angeles. When temperatures were higher, the Los Angeles coast was home
to mollusks that now live off the coast of Central America.
Researcher Sam McLeod points out the fossilized skull of a gray whale
that lived off the coast of California 100,000 years ago. It was a time
of global warming when the polar ice was melting and sea levels were
high. He says the changes seen in these fossils show that such cycles
were natural.
"Now we don't understand all the details about how and why global
warming occurs, or why you have the reverse, which is ice ages, where
you have a lowering of the sea levels because the water gets tied up in
the glaciers and the polar ice," Mr. McLeod said. "But it is a natural
phenomenon that does occur. It can have severe impacts. But it's
something that has occurred many times in the past, and we know is
going to happen in the future, and apparently we're in the middle of at
least a slight global warming period right now."
He adds that humans are contributing to the warming process by
releasing so-called greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. While
scientists debate the precise extent of the human impact, he says that
global warming has the potential of creating major changes in the
earth's environment.
Researcher Regina Wetzer studies sea life to monitor the biodiversity
of the local waters. She says new species are easy to find on any
California beach because so many species remain unclassified. She
points to some tiny sea creatures in a petri dish.
"It's a common myth that we know everything that's out there," she
said. "It's very easy to go to the shore and look at organisms this
size, a few millimeters or even a few centimeters across, and many of
them are new and have not been previously described. So in order to be
able to look at anything like global change down the line, we need to
know who's there first and describe them. And that's where the role of
museums come in."
She says that, unfortunately, many species are being lost before they
can be described, sometimes through natural processes and sometimes as
a result of human activity.
Scientists need not look far to find species that have become extinct.
In the neighboring city of Pasadena, a species of freshwater shrimp,
called the Pasadena shrimp, appears to be gone. The shrimp were once
abundant in local rivers, but the rivers were paved over with drainage
channels and the last specimens of the Pasadena shrimp were collected
in 1933.
Scientists say there is a trade-off. Humans need a place to live, and
in creating it, they may displace other species. But George Davis,
crustacea manager for the Natural History Museum, says it is not a
matter to be taken lightly, and that crustaceans like this small shrimp
are also important.
"Crustaceans are at the base of the food chain, right there with
plankton and what have you," he said. "And if you wipe if out, you wipe
out an awful lot of the marine environment, which eventually is going
to affect man as well. So it's a good idea to know what we've got
before we get rid of it, and in this case, I don't think we'd want to
get rid of it."
Mr. Davis adds that another threatened crustacean could well have met
its end at human hands, depriving medicine of an important diagnostic
tool. For years, horseshoe crabs were harvested from beaches and ground
up for fertilizer. But scientists discovered that the crab's blood
contains a substance that reacts to endotoxins, dangerous chemicals
produced by certain bacteria. The pharmaceutical industry uses blood
drawn from the creature for a diagnostic serum, then the crab is
returned unharmed to its natural habitat.
Humans are not the only creatures that change an ecosystem. Invasive
plant or animal species can have an unexpected effect on the local
ecology. Changes in the weather have an even greater impact. These
scientists say that the balance of nature is delicate, and their
challenge is to monitor these shifts and understand the extent to which
humans are causing them.
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