Date post: | 01-Dec-2015 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | steven-schmidt |
View: | 93 times |
Download: | 1 times |
On Top of the World: why we need to
protect life up above
January 26, 2013
Steven Schmidt
On Top of the World - With Don Perry, the 'Jacques Cousteau of the Rainforest Canopy'
I want to say a few words about Don Perry, Dr. Perry, who swung in and posted a couple
comments yesterday on my Facebook page about climate change, global warming and its coming
impact (e.g., a big, very BIG sea level rise). Be aware, Don is not your standard scientist who has
dwelt in academia, collecting accolades and plaudits for his lifetime of work and explorations of
the bio-universe. Don has gone on from UCLA to literally change the way we see our world.
As I used to say about Don, when we were working together back when I lived in LA and he was
starting his career that would revolutionize the science of tropical forest study, Don is unique in
his field, he's a pioneer (and "bioneer"), he's an explorer, an inventor. Don invented new
techniques and methods for ascending and studying the 'real jungle', up above far from LA's
glam, and proceeded to enable and show us what the resplendent, amazing rainforest, the richest
biosphere on earth, the canopy, was like and it was wonderful... first-ever pictures and reports
and science from on high. I was privileged to help as his representative and we saw Don's visions
reach audiences around the world as he opened eyes to the eco-wonders of the environment we
live in and the world we came from long ago, that is, if you believe in evolution... Don was a
"Jacques Cousteau of the Rainforest Canopy." I meant the words when I said them and still do.
Don's pioneering work has been featured in Scientific American, National Geographic,
Smithsonian, New York Sunday Times magazine, Life, Newsweek, Paris Match, Quick of
Germany, Popular Science, etc, etc, etc.
I have to say that Don's career is one-of-a-kind, an unparalleled feat of brave, courageous ascents
and creative imagination and engineering that followed, from Topanga canyon w/ Southern Cal
beginnings, to cross-bows firing lines and stringing canopy webs and going up himself, then a
first-gen automated canopy exploration web system, to the first aerial, eco-trams for non-
scientists and tourists and eco-preneurs, and zip line projects for all of us world over, Don has
been reaching up for decades, surviving close calls and still going strong.
Don has changed the way we see "the jungle". I can't remember how many times I've explained
over the years that the jungle isn't the way most everyone thinks about it -- it's not about
Victorian-like stories, there's no machete at the ready, natives chopping away and a gun slung on
a strap on your shoulder like Stanley and Livingston or Tarzan or Sheena, Queen of the Jungle,
Hollywood's film versions of the jungle. Rather, the real jungle's up there, the richest biosphere,
60, 80, 100, 120 feet up and higher (think Amazon and meters if you want.) It's really up above,
what I used to call "the cradle of new life forms", where evolution is still happening and
happening fast... we're talking about life forms few have seen and studied, a gazillion types and
insects and small creatures and green species, varieties, animals whose lives are lived out quickly
and generation to generation in a geo-minute or -second, survival or not and adaptation
happening in evolutionary timelines.
We now are seeing and witnessing and in the past few decades realizing the impacts and dangers
to the rain forests, even before we discover the genetic environments we're wiping out as we
clear cut and burn and rip away, humans interjecting profound change by destroying the rain
forests worldwide. This story that science is now beginning to bring to us stands in contrast to
green biodiversity and saving life, a pro-life position, where science and voices like Don's and
those of us who've lived the life of being green are telling us - ACT, ACT NOW, for our own
global health and well-being, act to save, be "conservative", truly conservative, not "crazy
conservative", pay attention to the facts, conserve, conserve now, fast
Don was (and is) an original eco-explorer who realized the need to see what is at stake, he saw
and he created an EcoTram, as it's now called, one of the first eco-explorer ventures designed to
teach up close. He's devoted himself to the work, taking science to the next step, acting on his
discoveries. The eco-trams jump started eco-tourism up above in the canopies, as they carry eco-
tourists thru the tropical forests where they can come eye-to-eye with life's rich diversity. In
Costa Rica as one of his trams, a first, has been running near San Juan, for years w/ travelers and
adventurers from Europe, the US, Asia and around the world experiencing personally the real,
diverse variety of life in the canopy and, as Don and our hopes began to come to be, all of these
first-timers could become evangelists, returning home to tell their stories of what the real world
is like up there and why it's worth saving. There's no better way, as Mr. Wizard, Don Herbert
would tell me, to teach than up close, hands on. People could sense, feel, touch, smell the
richness up close and personal and truly appreciate what it is, what we are trying to save when
we talk about saving the tropical forests, the lungs of the earth and much more. It's about Gaia,
it's about breathing and much more
Thank you Don
Thank you for going up there in the old days and ever since
The trees are where we came from... spires, in'spiration' we a'spire' to a 'heaven' up above,
cathedrals spire above, our language imagining goodness as we look up... and as we've evolved
since our descent, let's rediscover what we left, rich, very rich and needed life
Thank you, you've battled and your new directions, your work on more e-trams, your questioning
of human evolution beginning w/ us as the "greatest climbers", your thoughts here on the future
of sea rise as you wrote about yesterday on my my FB wall as I mulled about Doonesbury's
myFacts take on global warming deniers, (especially pertinent to us folks who live barely above
sea level), I want you to know you're truly appreciated
___
Rain Forest Canopy -- and Climate Change/Global Warming -
http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3408000258.html
Significance of the Rain Forest Canopy in Ecological Processes
Canopies of all types, including boreal and tropical forests, play a crucial role in the maintenance
of ecological processes, although thus far, the attention of researchers has tended to concentrate
on those in the tropics, rather than those in temperate climates.
The forest canopy is the principal site for the interchange of heat, oxygen, water vapor, and
carbon dioxide. It has been estimated that most photosynthetic activities in the biosphere occur in
the canopy. Forest canopies account for almost half of the carbon stored in terrestrial vegetation
and fix more carbon per year than any other habitat. Ecophysio-logical studies are therefore
crucial to predict the impact of increasing atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide in global
warming. Thus, forest canopies both control regional climate and play an important role in
regulating global climate.
'Carbon fixing', photosynthesis, what the rainforests do and why they need to be protected -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_fixing
___
"It is possible that we could still save tropical forests and ourselves... each of us is responsible."
- Life Above the Jungle Floor, A Biologist Explores a Strange and Hidden Treetop World
Simon & Schuster, ©1986 - One can almost hear an uncomfortable rustling in academic halls as
new discoveries bring fascinating pieces of the canopy puzzle into place. The emerging picture
clearly shows that the canopy has been a foremost habitat in the evolution of life.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0671544543/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&me=&selle
r=
http://www.amazon.com//gp/offer-listing/0671644262/sr=/qid=/?condition=new&tag=bf-ns-
author-lp-20
http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-
listing/0671544543/ref=tmm_hrd_new_olp_0?ie=UTF8&condition=new
__________________________________________________________________
"It was a change in perspective, an awakening, deja vu.... I felt I belonged there"
The canopy world flourishes at the equivalent of the “15th floor” of the rain forest, 50 metres
up. It is difficult to study from ground level because of the dense vegetation that obscures the
world above. Three-quarters of rain forest trees have limbs that are too weak to climb. Many rise
25 metres without branching. (One-step) Snakes, scorpions, numerous ants and troublesome
insects are a further deterrent.... The rain forest canopy, Perry points out, contains "the most
complex communities of life on earth".
>Dr. Donald Perry, founder of The Rainforest Aerial Tram, pioneered the exploration of the
canopy beginning in 1974. His innovative methods of access include rope systems and an
automated cable way. Of his latest idea he states, "no system in the world can offer this intimate
proximity to such an extensive volume of rainforest. Knowledge that will help save forests will
finally be within reach." Dr. Perry began work on an 'ecoTram' after becoming convinced that
the only way to stop destruction of the rainforest was by showing not only Costa Ricans but
people throughout the world the wonder of this unexplored habitat and by creating an
alternative to unsustainable exploitation of the forest. Dr. Perry's canopy access methods are
now used worldwide by a network of arboreal biologists who are uncovering secrets of treetop
life.
Rainforest Alliance - Forests are home to some two-thirds of the world's plants and animals. As
they are cleared and degraded, the unique flora and fauna that depend on these ecosystems
become threatened with extinction.
>In 1978, studying the role of herbivorous bats in dispersing seeds of the monkey-pot tree in
Costa Rica, Perry hit on the solution: a special web of ropes and cables that permitted
unrestricted movement across a canopy. With John Williams, an engineer friend from California,
Perry developed a system for a platform, 400 metres of rope web, pulleys and descent ropes,
with which he could move from ground level to above the tree top and anywhere inside the
canopy world. "The combination of the web and the descent ropes gave unrestricted movement
through a volume of forest an acre in area and 30 metres in depth, opening great biological
wealth to observation," Perry recalls.
With Williams he designed the Automated Web for Canopy Exploration (AWCE), using a
stainless steel cable, a rigid chair and wireless controls. This took much of the fear out of canopy
research and enabled two researchers at a time to manoeuvre up to the canopy at 30 centimetres
a second. The AWCE design won him a Rolex Award, and Popular Science said it "promises to
open the jungle to research the same way scuba gear opened the oceans".
Popular Science's description (including a reference (above) we were offering to the work of
Cousteau, a comparison between the rich life in the oceans and rich life of rain forests and the
scientific breakthrough of Cousteau's invention of the scuba gear enabling close up studies and
Don's invention of climbing gear enabling science close up and personal) -
http://books.google.com/books?id=J3sUn8WV22MC&pg=PA87&lpg=PA87&dq=don+perry
>Don Perry, Ecotram's founder was instrumental in igniting Costa Rica’s ecotourism-based
economic transformation and a whole new field -- the scientific investigation of the most
complex communities of life on earth found living on high tropical tree limbs. This work was
responsible for the zip-line fad sweeping the globe as well as the use of cable-ways to view
nature. Now Ecotram LLC has added a new investigative and ecotouristic tool to its lineup of
cable-ways for exploring and studying nature. [LinkedIn]
_________
ps, for my [vidprotalk forum] friends, remind me to tell you the story of servo drive cams, auto
programmed to run w/o smelly, noisy people around (to keep human impacts down ala the
Heisenberg principle), the film n video shooting up there over the 'highways in the sky', huge and
multi dimensioned limbs where the animals run and what can happen when two beasties go out
for a night run and come racing up to an 'intersection' where they meet a not so nice, or very
nice, surprise coming the other way, the treetop life …
Comment Share
Steven Schmidt "It is possible that we could still save tropical forests and ourselves...
each of us is responsible."
Steven Schmidt ... what we are trying to save when we talk about saving the tropical
forests, the lungs of the earth and much more. It's about Gaia, it's about breathing and
much more
Steven Schmidt speaking of Gaia and its whole earth ideas, as a flash back, an old buddy,
Rick Berman, produced the kid's version of Blue Marble, back when we both lived in NY
and then he went on to producing the Star Treks in LA, Gene Rodenberry's successor
The Sacred Balance (TV) Excerpt - James Lovelock Explains Gaia Hypothesis
www.youtube.com
http://goo.gl/L7rrr David Suzuki talks...
Steven Schmidt http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Blue_Marble
The Blue Marble - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org
The Blue Marble is a famous photograph of the Earth, taken on December 7, 1972
January 26 at 11:35pm
Donald Perry Thanks for the quotes. Reading them I realized who shaped my awareness.