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Jan162012

2012 Conference

Rethinking 'Invasive Species': Environmentalism Gone Awry?

The ever expanding war on 'invasive species' is giving 'green cover' to the widespread use of inadequately tested pesticides that threaten the health of the very soil and water that sustain all life.

It is time to reexamine the underlying assumptions and motivations for this campaign and explore creative rather than destructive responses to changes in our environment.

Mark your calendar to join environmentalists, policy makers, lawyers, and other concerned citizens at the upcoming conference : Rethinking 'Invasive Species': Environmentalism Gone Awry?  to discuss this important issue!

October 7 & 8, 2012

University of the District of Columbia, David A. Clarke School of Law

The conference will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the publication of Rachel Carson's Silent Spring and will be held-most appropriately-on Columbus Day when, in 1492, the ecosystems of the 'Old' and 'New' Worlds were forever transformed.

This event is being planned and sponsored by Fearless Fund. 

For more information, contact  info@fearlessfund.info.

 


The war on "invasive species" has been founded more on ideology than science. A conference examining the question is much needed and long overdue. 

---Michael Pollan

Author of The Botany of Desire and The Omnivore's Dilemma

Knight Professor of Science and Environmental Journalism at UC Berkeley.

 

Background

Historically, wherever man migrated, he brought plants prized for food, fiber, medicine, and ornament. With world exploration and trade, the exchange of flora and fauna became ever wider, and after 1492, the ecosystems of the continents were transformed.

Importation was encouraged by presidents and agencies such as the US Office of Plant Introduction. In fact, the US Department of Agriculture planted the now vilified kudzu for erosion control and other purposes. Today, 98% of our crops and many plants we think of as American as apple pie are actually from somewhere else-including the apples in that pie.

At the start of the 20th century, however, laws were passed to ‘protect crops and livestock from the wilds of Nature.’ By mid-century, in a climate of war and fear of foreign attack, the theory of invasion biology branded alien species as invaders. War was officially declared on invasive species in 1999 with Executive Order 13112 which authorized billion dollar funds and a complex network of agencies to respond to ‘alien species whose introduction does or is likely to cause economic or environmental harm or harm to human health.’

Rethinking War

Recently, some ecologists have started to raise objections to this approach. Many of the species initially thought to be inherently harmful have been found to be environmental service providers, or useful medicines or food sources. Further, evolutionary biologists have begun to warn against shortsightedness, noting that ecosystems are constantly changing; species and communities naturally come and go.

Perhaps most significantly, scientists warn about the use of dangerous compounds as a solution to the perceived problems of invasive species. Timothy Scott, author of Invasive Plant Medicine writes: “even if the poisons are carefully applied (and they aren’t most of the time) they eventually contaminate the water, soil and air and enter the food chain, affecting microorganisms up through to our dinner places.”

Furthermore, these costly eradication efforts often fail, affect unintended species, and actually create superweeds that then require more and stronger herbicides leading to a perpetual cycle of pollution.

The good news is that many plants identified as invasive are actually beneficial. For example, edible garlic mustard actually contains more vitamin C than orange juice, more vitamin A than spinach, and shares the medicinal benefits of both garlic and mustard. Japanese knotweed, long planted along riverbanks for stability and shade, is valued by beekeepers as an important nectar source when little else is flowering. This plant has been used for centuries as a gentle laxative, is an excellent source of the potent antioxidant resveratrol, and it is now used in treating Lyme disease. And yet these plants are vilified and eradicated. This exemplifies Tim Scott’s caution that in attacking “invasives,” we may be “destroying potent medicinal remedies.”

To read more go to: 

In Jeopardy : The Future of  Organic, Biodynamic, Transitional Agriculture 

 

Conference at a Glance: 

Rethinking 'Invasive Species': Environmentalism Gone Awry?

Date: October 7-8, 2012

Location: University of the District of Columbia, David A. Clarke School of Law 

Format, Events: Sunday evening reception. Monday - full day conference (to include continental breakfast and lunch) with opening speaker/emcee and 4 panel discussions. Monday will also include informational tables for partner/sponsor organizations.  

Conference Goals:

To educate attendees about the complex issue of 'Invasive Species'-definition, history, current and changing paradigms. 

To question: Is the war against 'invasive species' justified? Are pesticides really safe?Are vast resources being misspent? Are there creative rather than destructive responses to our changing world-ones which work with -not against- Nature?

To connect the dots between this issue and climate change and globalization, environmental health, politics and legal issues, food and water safety.  

Speakers to date include:

Mark A. Davis, Professor of Biology, Macalester College, author of Invasion Biology

James T. Morris, Director, Baruch Institute for Marine and Coastal Sciences

Timothy L. Scott, herbalist, author of Invasive Plant Medicine

David I. Theodoropoulos, Director, Las Sombras Biological Preserve, author of Invasion Biology:Critique of a Pseudoscience

Jono Neiger, professor, conservation biologist, Regenerative Design Group

Ellie Goldberg M.Ed., Silent Spring Institute, Healthy-Kids.info

 

 


Fearless Fund Conference - October 8, 2012

Suggested Giving Levels & Benefits

 

Businesses

Guardian $2,500

  • Full page advertisement in event program (if pledge and artwork received by August 22, 2012)

  • Listing and weblink on Fearless Fund website

  • Listing, with logo, in event literature and conference program booklet

  • Prominent recognition at October 7 reception

  • Five conference registrations

Protector $1,000

  • Half page advertisement in event program (if pledge and artwork received by August 22, 2012)

  • Listing on Fearless Fund website

  • Listing on event literature and conference program booklet

  • Recognition at October 7 reception

  • Three conference registrations

Caretaker $500

  • Quarter page advertisement in event program (if pledge and artwork received by August 22, 2012)

  • Listing on Fearless Fund website

  • Listing in conference program booklet

  • Recognition at October 7 reception

  • Two conference registrations

 

Nonprofit Organizations

Champion $500

  • Half page advertisement in program (if pledge and artwork received by August 22, 2012)

  • Listing and weblink on Fearless Fund website

  • Listing, with logo, in event literature and conference program booklet

  • Prominent recognition at October 7 reception

  • Information table at conference

  • Five conference registrations

Steward $250

  • Quarter page advertisement in program (if pledge and artwork received by August 22, 2012)

  • Listing on Fearless Fund website

  • Listing on event literature and conference program booklet

  • Recognition at October 7 reception

  • Information table at conference

  • Three conference registrations

Defender $100

  • Listing in conference program booklet

  • Information table at conference

  • Two conference registrations

 

Individual Registrations

Standard - $75 (July-Sept) Early Bird - $60 (April-June)

Late - $90 (Oct) Student/Public Interest - $35

 

For more information just click on CONTACT US

 

Make checks payable to Fearless Fund

 

Mail to:

Fearless Fund

Suite 204

2800 Ontario RD NW

Washington DC 20009

 

                 

 

 


 


 

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