I wonder if all those who advocate longer and more restrictive lock downs are really aware of all the costs being imposed by those policies.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Wednesday, August 12, 2020
Tourism collapse puts wildlife conservation in peril
Two
decades ago, Rosa María Ruiz purchased 4,000 hectares (9,885 acres) of
land along the Beni River, near the small village of Rurrenabaque, with
the goal of transforming it from a heavily logged patch of the Bolivian
Amazon into a thriving private wildlife reserve. The Bolivian eco-warrior had just had success creating what the Wildlife Conservation Society believes is the most biodiverse protected area on
the planet, the nearby Madidi National Park, but her vocal criticism of
Madidi's protections under government control got her kicked out.
Undeterred, she set up her own private park upriver and named it Serere
after a gangly bird with a blue face and punk rock hair. Fast-forward to early 2020, and Serere Eco-Reserve
was home to more than 300 species of birds and some of South America's
most elusive mammals, including dwarf leopards, night monkeys, jaguars,
tapirs and giant anteaters. The revival of this small swath of the
Amazon was made possible thanks to the support of foreign eco-tourists
who paid around $100 a day for all-inclusive overnight stays filled with
hiking, conservation lessons and family-style meals sourced from the
onsite garden. Then, of course, the pandemic
hit, and Serere hasn't welcomed a single visitor since March 23. With no
incoming funds, and little in the way of savings, Ruiz had to cut staff
from 40 to just seven rangers who've already chased off poachers and
seen around 7 acres of forest pillaged for lumber (a trend echoed across the Amazon Basin)."We can't keep going at the rate we are now without further support," she says, noting a GoFundMe campaign
created to tackle the emergency. "It's evident that if we don't have a
presence and protection in Serere, especially because of the economic
crisis everyone's living now, then those who are hard-up will continue
cutting down the trees and selling lumber for easy money."It's
a predicament faced by highly respected conservation projects across
the developing world, who have spent much of 2020 navigating the new
reality of trying to protect wild animals while dealing with the fiscal
fallout of Covid-19. Tourism has been the fragile pillar on which thousands of
conservation projects stood for decades, helping to protect wild,
trafficked and refugee animals, restore vital habitats and educate the
public about sustainability. When that pillar crumbled overnight amid
global travel bans, the system collapsed...MORE
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Your question is kind of silly Frank of course not. We all know these guys are clueless. They're pandering to those who don't have any sense.
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