World Land Trust

Saving threatened habitats worldwide

You are here: World Land Trust  > News > Green Issues > Why are dead species worth more than the living?

In this section:

Help save Jaguars and other wildlife

Contact the WLT

+44 (0)1986 874422

Contact details »

Get Green Issues posts delivered to your desktop

Subscribe to Green Issues

How does this work? »

More WLT news feeds »

Green Issues

A weekly column on current issues by John A Burton of the World Land Trust. The views expressed are personal, and do not necessarily reflect those of the WLT. Feedback and comments are welcomed.

Read the most current Green Issues posts here.

 

Why are dead species worth more than the living?

Friday, June 04, 2004

I recently attended a conference in Cambridge on the history of natural history, and one particularly interesting paper chronicled the history of the Thylacine, an extinct marsupial wolf from Tasmania. Depressingly, the moment the species was declared officially extinct ? 50 years after the last authentic sighting of a living specimen, the value of its dried skins and pickled specimens leapt up. Now a skin can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. And last night I was looking at a sale catalogue for a natural history auction held in California recently and some of the prices realise were truly astounding. A cave bear skeleton fetched $11,000, a pliosaur skeleton, $58,000, an elephant bird egg $41,000, and so it went on, with tens of thousands of dollars being paid for fossils and minerals.

Why is it that so many people are prepared to pay such vast sums of money, when an equal amount would save thousands of living species. Fossils are interesting, just as works of art are important markers in the history of humankind, but it is inconceivable that anyone should value them more highly than living, unique species. Yet while wealthy collectors pay astronomical prices for long dead species, species are disappearing from the planet for ever. Does anyone know how I can contact these collectors, and persuade them to leave a better bequest to the planet than a heap of rocks or dried skins?

Labels:



Posted by John Friday, June 04, 2004
 
Share this post with your friends:
Share

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Response Policy

The WLT reserves the right to delete any comments that are inaccurate, seriously illiterate, libellous, malicious, obscene or likely to cause offence on the grounds of decency. However, we will not normally delete responses that are simply critical or expressing and alternative opinion.

Links to this post:

Are you a blogger? Create a Link to this post.

Read the most current Green Issues posts here.

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

*

Earlier Green Issues posts:

Registered charity no. 1001291

World Land Trust, Blyth House, Bridge Street, Halesworth, Suffolk, IP19 8AB, United Kingdom
© Copyright World Land Trust 2008-2009