Between Pride and Despair: Stories of Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef and Wet Tropics Rainforests - Queensland Review: Special Issue (Vol. 28 No 2 (2021)) - Kerrie Foxwell-Norton

Between Pride and Despair: Stories of Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef and Wet Tropics Rainforests - Queensland Review: Special Issue (Vol. 28 No 2 (2021)) - Kerrie Foxwell-Norton

Drawing a Line in the Sand: Bioengineering as Conservation in the Face of Extinction Debt

Between Pride and Despair: Stories of Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef and Wet Tropics Rainforests - Queensland Review: Special Issue (Vol. 28 No 2 (2021)) - Kerrie Foxwell-Norton

Josh Wodak [+-]
Western Sydney University
Dr Josh Wodak works at the intersection of the Environmental Humanities and Science and Technology Studies. His research addresses the socio-cultural dimensions of the climate crisis and the Anthropocene, with a focus on the ethics and efficacy of conservation through technoscience, including synthetic biology, assisted evolution and climate engineering. He is currently a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University, a Chief Investigator at the ARC Centre for Excellence in Synthetic Biology and an Adjunct Senior Lecturer, School of Biological, Earth, and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales.

Description

What conservation could possibly become commensurate with the rates of human-induced biophysical change unfolding at the advent to the Sixth Extinction Event? Any such conservation would require time-critical interventions into both ecosystems and evolution itself, for these interventions would also require domains of risk and ethics that shatter normative understandings of conservation. Yet a line appears to have been drawn in the sand against such experimental conservation. Holding the line will retain conservation practices that are null and void against the extinction debt facing multitudes of species. Crossing the line would invoke scales of bioengineering that appear abhorrent to normative morality. This article explores the question of whether this line in the sand could, and should, be crossed through a detailed case study of current and proposed conservation for endangered Chelonia mydas sea turtles on Raine Island, a small coral cay on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. Chelonia mydas and Raine Island are presented as synecdoche for conservation across diverse species across the world because turtles are among the most endangered of all reptiles and Raine Island is the largest and most important rookery in the world for this species. With such lines disappearing under the rising seas, the article contemplates the unthinkable questions that our current situation demands we ask, and perhaps even try to answer.

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Citation

Wodak, Josh. Drawing a Line in the Sand: Bioengineering as Conservation in the Face of Extinction Debt. Between Pride and Despair: Stories of Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef and Wet Tropics Rainforests - Queensland Review: Special Issue (Vol. 28 No 2 (2021)). Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 169-182 Jun 2022. ISBN 9781800503120. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=44252. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.44252. Jun 2022

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