Fifty Years of Arctic National Wildlife Preservation
Biologist George Schaller on the debate over ANWR conservation and why the refuge must be saved
- By Molly Loomis
- Smithsonian.com, March 10, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
The refuge is often referred to as “the Last Great Wilderness.” Is it truly “wilderness?”
It is indeed America’s last great wilderness, something the nation should be proud to protect as part of its natural heritage. However, we tend to think of places with few or no people such as the Arctic Refuge as “wilderness.” I do too, from my cultural perspective. Remember, if you’re a Gwich’in or Inuit, the Arctic Refuge and other parts of the Brooks Range is your home in which you subsist. It has symbolic value too, but in a much more specific way in that there are sacred places and special symbolic sites. They may view their “wilderness” quite differently.
The National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, to the west, is four million acres larger than ANWR. What is the difference between the two?
The NPR-A is not an undeveloped place. Part of the Bureau of Land Management’s mandate is to allow development—there’s been drilling, exploration and much has already been leased. Unlike the refuge, it also does not extend over the Brooks Range south into extensive taiga.
Are there unsolved mysteries left in the Arctic?
We know very little about the ecological processes in the Arctic, or anywhere else for that matter. Yes, somebody like myself studies a species but that’s one of thousands that are all integrated with each other. How are they all integrated to form a functioning ecological community? With climate change, we don’t even know the ecological base line that we’re dealing with. What will happen to the tundra vegetation when the permafrost melts? We really need to know far more. But fortunately a considerable amount of research is now going on.
It has been over 50 years. Why do you keep fighting to protect ANWR?
If you treasure something, you can never turn your back, or the proponents of plunder and pollution will move in and destroy it. Let us hope that this anniversary can stimulate politicians to act with patriotism and social responsibility by designating the coastal plain of the Arctic refuge as a wilderness area, and thereby forever prevent oil and gas companies and other development from destroying the heart of American’s last great wilderness.
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Comments (1)
The Muries were the pioneers of the natural history of Alaska, especially Adolph Murie's 1944 momental book "The Wolves of Mount McKinley." They lobbied diligently for the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, because they truly understood the ecosystem of the area, and the need to preserve it.
Posted by Tim Upham on October 4,2012 | 11:29 PM