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Modern wildlife conservation in a turbulent world | Wesley Larson | TEDxVienna

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    So I want to you take into a place
    where humans really aren't supposed to be:
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    the inside of an occupied bear den.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, bears elicit a certain
    fear response in most people,
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    and that's something
    that we're supposed to have.
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    Hundreds of thousands of years
    of concurrent evolution with bears
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    have taught us that they
    and other predators
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    are animals to be avoided.
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    So, my friend Corey Arnold
    took this photo with National Geographic,
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    and you can't see my face,
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    but I promise you
    there's a look of terror on it.
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    I wasn't happy to be
    in there with this bear,
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    and he wasn't happy
    to have me in there with him there.
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    This particular bear needed
    a new battery in his GPS collar.
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    So, for me to do that,
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    (Laughter)
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    I had to get within a couple
    of meters of the bear,
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    where I have a pole
    that has a syringe on it,
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    and inject him with that.
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    So in the US we have a saying:
    "Don't poke a sleeping bear,"
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    and that's literally
    what I was in there to do.
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    (Laughter)
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    Luckily for me, everything
    went fairly smoothly.
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    I was able to change out the battery,
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    and more fortunately,
    I was able to leave the den in one piece.
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    So, a lot of wildlife biologists
    do have stories like these,
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    whether they're working
    with dangerous animals
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    or they're working in conditions
    that can be really hazardous -
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    bone-breaking arctic cold
    or searing desert heat.
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    It can be a really challenging profession.
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    And on top of those challenges,
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    you also have to deal
    with this kind of tedious stuff
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    of writing papers and reports
    and research, and crunching data.
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    To get through those kind of things,
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    there's something critical
    that wildlife biologists need,
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    and that's passion.
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    Passion is what helps us
    through those experiences,
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    and it's also what helps us fight a battle
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    that's really becoming
    incredibly lopsided.
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    So, I grew up in Montana,
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    which was a wonderful place
    for an animal lover to grow up,
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    surrounded by different wildlife.
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    And in particular, there is
    a pond system near my home,
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    where my brothers and I would go,
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    and we'd catch frogs
    and turtles and snakes,
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    and look for all sorts
    of different animals.
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    In particular,
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    there's one species of frog,
    the northern leopard frog,
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    that was really plentiful,
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    and in a given summer,
    we'd see thousands of these frogs.
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    And then over a matter
    of just a few years,
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    I went from seeing thousands
    of leopard frogs to absolutely none.
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    And as a little boy,
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    that kind of being witness
    to a local extinction like that
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    was really hard for me.
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    This was an animal
    that had brought me a lot of joy
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    and taught me a lot
    about the natural world,
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    and suddenly it was gone.
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    And I think in my mind,
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    extinction was something
    that was really relegated to dinosaurs,
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    and seeing it happen
    to an animal that I loved
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    really created a paradigm shift for me.
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    And I realized that nature isn't infinite
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    and it's something
    that we do need to protect.
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    So, fast-forward.
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    I'm in my 30s.
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    That's that same bear,
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    after we managed to get him out
    and change his collar.
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    I've worked with bears
    for about eight years,
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    and then I've also been able
    to host a little show with Great Big Story
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    called "Mission Wild."
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    And during that time,
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    I've been able to see
    a lot of different wildlife biologists
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    and the species they work with,
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    and really see the ins and outs
    of wildlife conservation.
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    And I want to take you guys
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    through a few of the things
    that I've learned.
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    So, we're going to start
    with the pangolin,
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    so not penguin - "pan-go-lin."
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    It looks like a Pokemon,
    but it's an animal,
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    I promise you.
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    (Laughter)
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    They're really cute.
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    They live throughout
    Southeast Asia and in Africa,
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    and their main distinguishing feature
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    is this armor of scales
    that are made of keratin,
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    and when the pangolin feels threatened,
    it rolls into a ball,
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    and even the largest predators
    aren't able to break that defense,
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    so it's really effective,
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    and it's made them
    so they have no natural predators.
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    But unfortunately,
    those very same scales
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    are worth more than the price of gold
    on the black market
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    for their use in traditional medicines
    in both China and Southeast Asia.
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    And you know, setting aside
    the importance of culture and tradition,
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    there simply aren't enough pangolins
    to fulfill that demand,
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    and they're being killed
    by the hundreds of thousands.
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    Hundreds of tons of pangolins
    are killed every year to fill this need.
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    And there's a really
    haunting image by Paul Hilton,
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    who is a wildlife conservationist
    and photographer,
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    and it shows thousands of dead pangolins
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    that have been discarded
    after having their scales removed.
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    So, this is a huge problem.
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    They joined tigers
    and elephants and rhinos
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    as species that are being pushed
    to the brink of extinction
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    through the illegal wildlife trade.
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    And we don't know
    how many pangolins are out there,
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    so we could see the loss of this species
    in the next 10 years even.
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    So there's a lot of things
    that are being done for pangolins.
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    One of the groups that I was able
    to work with a little bit
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    is the African Pangolin Working Group,
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    and they have a really unique way
    of assessing the supply of pangolins
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    while we're kind of waiting for hopefully
    a cultural shift in the demand.
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    So what they do is they set up stings,
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    where they pose as buyers
    for pangolin scales -
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    well actually, for live pangolins -
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    and they arrange a meet with poachers.
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    When those poachers show up,
    they're promptly arrested,
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    and they face some
    pretty serious jail sentences,
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    sometimes over 10 years.
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    The pangolin is then confiscated,
    and it's taken to a hospital.
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    Now, often these pangolins
    go through some pretty intense torture
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    while they're in the care
    of those poachers,
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    and so they have to recover from both
    physical and psychological trauma,
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    and that can take some time.
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    They also have to learn
    how to be a wild pangolin again.
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    And so I was able to go
    on a little walk with this pangolin,
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    who was in that process,
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    and he was learning
    how to find termites and ants again.
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    And once he completes that process -
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    I believe he's still going through it -
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    he'll be released back in the wild,
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    and the biologist with the African
    Pangolin Working Group
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    will continue to monitor his situation.
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    They're actually learning a lot
    about pangolin natural behavior
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    through this process.
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    And most importantly, they're setting
    a precedent for the poachers
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    and for the criminal
    organizations behind them:
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    that people really do care
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    and that pangolins aren't something
    that they can continue to take
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    without consequence.
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    They're also educating a lot of people
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    about an animal that not
    too many people know about.
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    Okay, moving on to an animal
    that I've been able to work with a lot -
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    polar bears.
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    Polar bears are an incredibly
    charismatic animal.
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    We've all heard about them.
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    But they unfortunately find themselves
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    in the crosshairs
    of the global climate crisis.
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    Polar bears are sea ice obligates.
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    This means that they rely
    on the sea ice for everything;
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    most importantly, they use it
    as a platform for hunting seals.
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    Without the sea ice,
    they simply can't catch seals,
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    and they're forced
    to wait on land and fast
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    and wait for the sea ice to refreeze.
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    So those fasting periods
    are getting longer and longer,
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    and with it, the polar bears
    are getting more malnourished,
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    and malnourished bears
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    means that they're having
    reduced cub litter sizes, fewer cubs,
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    and we're even starting to see
    die-offs in adults.
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    Some of the world's leading
    polar bear biologists
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    think that there's the possibility
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    we lose the species
    in the next hundred years
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    if things don't change.
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    So that's saying, like, my grandkids
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    might grow up in a world
    without polar bears,
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    which is really devastating.
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    Luckily, there are some things
    that are being done for polar bears.
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    While we're kind of tackling
    this huge climate crisis,
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    there are certain problems
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    that are affecting
    populations of polar bears
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    that we can work on.
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    And I was able to work
    on one of those projects
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    both with Brigham Young University
    and Polar Bears International,
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    where we were looking at ways
    that we could protect polar bears
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    that decide to den and raise their cubs
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    near oil industry.
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    So, that project took place
    in northern Alaska,
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    which if you've never
    been to northern Alaska,
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    it's a really hard place to work.
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    I've seen temperatures
    of -55 degrees Celsius.
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    With the windchill,
    it gets a lot colder than that.
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    I've gotten frostbite
    on most of my fingers,
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    and once I even froze my eyeball
    completely solid.
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    Lost my eyesight.
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    Had to, like, frantically
    put my palm on my eye
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    and wait for it to thaw out,
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    and luckily it did, and twitch
    for like two months after that,
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    which was super annoying,
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    but I got my eyesight back.
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    Thankfully, you know,
    I was able to work, though,
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    in a really incredible environment:
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    I got to see the northern
    lights multiple times,
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    I got to see incredible wildlife
    like these musk oxen or this arctic fox,
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    and of course, I got
    to work with polar bears.
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    Our project specifically
    was looking at ways
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    that we could both create
    and enforce rules
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    for polar bears that decide
    to den near oil industry.
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    And those rules were put in place
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    to help the oil industry give these bears
    the space that they needed
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    so that they had the best possible chance
    of raising their cubs to adulthood.
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    So this is a bear that decided to den
    right next to some industry stuff;
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    and we shut everything down,
    gave her the space she needed,
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    and she raised this cub and was able
    to take it out on the sea ice.
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    So now we're going to talk a little bit
    about African Wild Dogs,
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    another animal
    that I was able to work with.
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    They're a wild species of dog,
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    they live throughout Sub-Saharan Africa,
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    and they're pack hunters.
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    They're incredibly good at it.
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    They're not just pack hunters,
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    but every animal in that pack
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    has a dynamic role
    and they all fill it super well.
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    These wild dogs -
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    they're also called "painted dogs" -
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    they have success
    in about 80% of their hunts.
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    So, for comparison,
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    lion prides will have success
    in about 30% of their hunts.
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    So they're incredibly
    successful predators,
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    which unfortunately puts them
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    at direct odds with another
    successful predator,
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    which is us.
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    Competition for game,
    livestock depredations, habitat loss
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    and disease transference
    from domestic dogs
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    has led to huge declines
    in wild dog populations.
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    The range used to extend
    throughout Africa,
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    and now they're confined
    to a few strongholds,
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    and we have less than
    6,000 wild dogs left in the world.
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    They're critically endangered.
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    Now, again, I was able
    to work with a group
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    that's doing some really interesting
    and fascinating wild dog research.
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    And what they're doing
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    is they're taking dogs
    from these strongholds,
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    where they're doing really well.
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    They'll take females from one
    and males from another,
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    and then they combine them
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    and put them in a place
    where they historically existed
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    to form a new pack.
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    And it's a wild dog
    range-expansion project.
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    Now, it's not as simple
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    as simply taking them
    from one place and another place
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    and putting them together
    and hoping that they're friends.
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    If you did that, they literally
    would kill each other
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    as soon as they came out of the sedation.
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    So, they have a really fascinating method
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    for making sure
    that pack gets established.
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    And what they do -
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    you'll have to watch that Mission Wild
    show I told you guys about
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    to see the whole process -
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    but what they do
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    is they take each female
    and they take each male
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    and they physically rub them together,
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    and I've got to do this.
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    When they're sedated,
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    you're rubbing them together,
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    and you're putting
    their spit on each other,
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    and you're just making sure
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    they smell as much as they possibly can
    like the other dogs.
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    That way, when they wake up,
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    they recognize, or they see these dogs
    that they don't necessarily recognize,
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    but they can smell them on themselves
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    and they think, "Okay,
    maybe this is a friend.
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    I guess I won't kill it."
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    You laugh, but it really does work,
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    and this Endangered Wildlife Trust group
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    and my friend Cole,
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    who's working on this project,
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    have seen some great success
    with their range expansion project.
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    So, this begs the question why.
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    You know, why should we
    care about wildlife?
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    It's 2019.
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    We're all emotionally exhausted.
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    We all only have
    so much emotional bandwidth.
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    So why wildlife, you know?
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    Why support biologists
    that are crawling into bear dens
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    and freezing body parts
    they didn't know they could freeze?
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    Why care about an animal
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    you just learned existed
    five minutes ago?
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    So I think there's
    multiple answers to that.
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    But I think, you know,
    you have the ecology
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    where each and every animal
    occupies a role in its ecosystem,
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    and when you take that animal
    out of that role,
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    it can really create huge effects
    that we don't necessarily understand
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    until that animal's gone.
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    But I think even more importantly
    is how animals affect us as people
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    and how they're important
    to the human condition.
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    You know, there's wild spaces
    that are endlessly important to us
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    because they teach us a lot
    about the complexities of life and joy,
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    and those wild spaces
    just aren't wild anymore
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    when you remove their inhabitants.
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    I was lucky enough
    to grow up in bear country,
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    and some of the wildest places I've been
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    were homes to really
    big populations of bears.
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    When you're hiking around bear country,
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    you have to really pay attention
    to your surroundings;
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    and because of that,
    all your senses are heightened
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    and, you know, your smell's heightened,
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    the colors are brighter,
    the air is crisper,
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    and it really puts you
    in touch with nature
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    in a way that you can't normally get.
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    I really can only get those feelings
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    in places that are home
    to these wild populations of animals.
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    It's something that really
    connects you to the natural world,
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    and it's endlessly important.
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    And I think we've failed
    as the most intelligent beings on Earth
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    if we let these species disappear,
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    and I think, you know,
    we're forfeiting up something
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    that evolution has taken
    millions of years to create,
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    and to me that's like losing
    the most precious works of our literature.
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    But luckily, there really is still
    so much more to preserve and protect,
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    and you don't have to be
    a wildlife biologist to do it.
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    So I have a few tips for people
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    that can help you
    in this fight to save wildlife.
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    So one of them is just to think
    about the way that you spend your money.
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    Try to do your research,
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    and don't contribute to these companies
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    that are contributing
    to these kind of problems:
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    wildlife trafficking,
    habitat loss, climate change.
  • 14:28 - 14:31
    Do your best to avoid
    giving those companies your money,
  • 14:31 - 14:34
    and then they'll see
    where your priorities lie,
  • 14:34 - 14:36
    and they'll try and meet those desires.
  • 14:36 - 14:39
    Next, and I think
    probably most importantly,
  • 14:39 - 14:43
    is we need to elect politicians
    that care about the health of our planet.
  • 14:44 - 14:47
    And, you know, we have
    politicians in place
  • 14:47 - 14:49
    that might not understand
    the crisis that we've created
  • 14:49 - 14:51
    or care to understand it,
  • 14:51 - 14:52
    and we need to replace them
  • 14:52 - 14:55
    with politicians that know
    and understand the science.
  • 14:55 - 14:56
    (Applause)
  • 14:56 - 14:58
    Thank you.
  • 14:58 - 15:01
    (Applause continues)
  • 15:07 - 15:12
    Finally, I think getting out into nature
    and kind of reforging those contacts,
  • 15:12 - 15:14
    reforging that emotional
    connection to nature,
  • 15:14 - 15:16
    is really important.
  • 15:16 - 15:18
    If you live in the city, go to a park.
  • 15:18 - 15:20
    If you can get to a national park, go.
  • 15:20 - 15:22
    If you can get to the wilderness, go.
  • 15:22 - 15:24
    And when you reforge that connection,
  • 15:24 - 15:26
    you'll start to care about it naturally,
  • 15:26 - 15:28
    and you'll naturally
    make the decisions to protect it.
  • 15:28 - 15:31
    And my job would be
    impossibly depressing without hope,
  • 15:31 - 15:33
    but by seeing people like yourselves here,
  • 15:33 - 15:34
    educating yourselves,
  • 15:34 - 15:36
    it gives me hope
    for the future of wildlife
  • 15:36 - 15:38
    and for the future of humanity.
  • 15:38 - 15:39
    Thank you.
  • 15:39 - 15:42
    (Applause)
Title:
Modern wildlife conservation in a turbulent world | Wesley Larson | TEDxVienna
Description:

As we lose wild species at an unprecedented rate, we must take action to preserve our critically important wildlife. Wesley's career as a wildlife biologist has led him everywhere from the high arctic of Alaska to the deserts of Africa, and he's seen firsthand many of the threats facing wildlife. There are many challenges to wildlife conservation, but the incredible efforts of biologists to conserve threatened species can give us hope.

As a wildlife biologist, his focus has been on bear species and he has primarily worked with polar and black bears for the past 8 years. During that time Wes also has been able to assist on a number of other wildlife conservation efforts for species such as African wild dogs, American alligators, golden eagles, spotted eagle rays, northern elephant seals, American kestrels, etc. His work has taken him everywhere from the Arctic to Africa, and he believes that wildlife conservation is not only essential for the preservation of the world's animals, but also for the continuation of the human spirit.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
15:48

English subtitles

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