Spectral ecologies: De/extinction in the Pyrenees

被引:11
作者
Searle, Adam [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Dept Geog, Cambridge, England
关键词
bucardo; cloning; de; extinction; de-extinction; ecological restoration; the Pyrenees; CAPRA-PYRENAICA MAMMALIA; DE-EXTINCTION; GEOGRAPHIES; CONSERVATION; REINTRODUCTION; RESTORATION; LANDSCAPE; EVOLUTION; CLONING; ETHICS;
D O I
10.1111/tran.12478
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
How is extinction problematised through biotechnological and ecological interventions, and how might such mediations elucidate different understandings of biotic loss and recovery? The bucardo - an endemic ibex from the Pyrenees - is the only extinct animal to have ever been cloned, and for seven short minutes in 2003, "extinction was not forever." Using the bucardo's extinction as a starting point, rather than an ending, this paper addresses the "spectral ecologies" of the Pyrenees. Drawing on interviews and extensive ethnographic work conducted in Spain and France, I discuss the implications of this cloning project, and examine the various ways in which it is contested. Speculative futures of bucardo clones "returning" to the Pyrenees seem unlikely, however, following the successful introductions of another subspecies of ibex to the French Pyrenees in 2014. Such events - following the mobilities and geographies of the ibex themselves - invalidate justifications for cloning in conservation. Spectral ecologies are characterised through the unsettling of - and departures from - linear temporalities. I broaden the ontological scope of species resurrection to attend to phenotypic shifts associated with ecological restoration projects, which I call "de/extinction." De/extinction unsettles a range of epistemological assumptions concerning two of conservation's key concepts: species and extinction. Introduced ibex in the Pyrenees are beginning to resemble the defining features of bucardo with every new generation, a fascinating reworking of the bucardo's absence. The figure of the ghost brings to the fore multiple pasts and futures, human and nonhuman, materialising and affecting bodies in spectral ecologies. This case offers a theoretical advance to the field of extinction studies and cultural geographies in considering different meanings of "the end," and the imagined futures of "lost" biota.
引用
收藏
页码:167 / 183
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] De-Extinction
    Novak, Ben Jacob
    GENES, 2018, 9 (11)
  • [22] An Analysis of Potential Ethical Justifications for Mammoth De-extinction And a Call for Empirical Research
    Rohwer, Yasha
    Marris, Emma
    ETHICS POLICY & ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 21 (01) : 127 - 142
  • [23] Why Wake the Dead? Identity and De-extinction
    Christopher Hunter Lean
    Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics, 2020, 33 : 571 - 589
  • [24] Authenticity and Autonomy in De-Extinction
    Lean, Christopher Hunter
    ETHICS POLICY & ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 25 (02) : 116 - 120
  • [25] The potential and pitfalls of de-extinction
    Richmond, Douglas J.
    Sinding, Mikkel-Holger S.
    Gilbert, M. Thomas P.
    ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA, 2016, 45 : 22 - 36
  • [26] De-extinction as Artificial Species Selection
    Turner D.D.
    Philosophy & Technology, 2017, 30 (4) : 395 - 411
  • [27] Mammoths and tigers and rhinos, oh my: mapping de-extinction species and networks
    Nelson, Avey
    O'Riordan, Kate
    SCIENCE AS CULTURE, 2025,
  • [28] Who to revive? Explaining charismatic species bias in the selection of de-extinction candidate species
    Molhuizen, Tessa
    Beumer, Koen
    Dorresteijn, Ine
    ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING E-NATURE AND SPACE, 2025,
  • [29] Spectral color, synchrony, and extinction risk
    Logdberg, Frida
    Wennergren, Uno
    THEORETICAL ECOLOGY, 2012, 5 (04) : 545 - 554
  • [30] Political ecologies of extinction: from endpoint to inflection-point. Introduction to the Special Section
    Buscher, Bram
    JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECOLOGY, 2021, 28 : 696 - 704