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Save a Species, Save a Life

August 24th, 2010

Care2
By Ethan Zohn

The world of professional soccer certainly has its share of stars — players who’ve elevated themselves to hero status with an incredible save or game-winning goal. But as anyone who’s ever played soccer will tell you, this beautiful game truly is a team sport.

In fact, the lessons I learned as a player and coach on the soccer field proved invaluable both as a competitor in “Survivor: Africa” and in my later struggle with cancer. Yet while a reality show competition and a battle with Hodgkin’s lymphoma may not seem to have much in common at first glance, I was able to survive both due to an invaluable assist from nature.

According to an ever growing body of research, however, the last remnants of the world’s natural areas are quickly disappearing. And I’m now speaking out in an effort to get others to join me in the effort to save these last wild areas.

It all started on Survivor: Africa. I’m alive today due to a drug derived from the rosy periwinkle, a rare African flower found on the island of Madagascar. Yet in 2002, while competing in “Survivor: Africa,” this delicate pink flower was the farthest thing from my mind.

Read Ethan’s story

Read more survivor stories

Tags: Ethan Zohn, Global Conservation Act, Hodgkin's lymphoma, medicine, rosy periwinkle, world cup
Posted in Alliance for Global Conservation News, Global, Protecting Nature's Pharmacy, Recent news, Related News |

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

U.S. Rep. Russ Carnahan’s push to preserve global habitats has caught the attention of Hollywood.

The St. Louis Democrat met this week with actor Don Cheadle, who is supporting a Carnahan bill aimed at preserving natural resources and protecting wildlife around the world.

Cheadle has grown as a global activist since appearing in “Hotel Rwanda,” the 2004 film set against the backdrop of genocide in Africa.

Read the full story.

Tags: Don Cheadle, Global Conservation Act, Representative Russ Carnahan
Posted in Global |

Omaha World-Herald

Representative FortebnerryCongressman Jeff Fortenberry today joined world-renowned conservationist Jane Goodall and Academy Award-nominated actor Don Cheadle in unveiling the Global Conservation Act. Jane Goodall is a frequent visitor to Nebraska, and Don Cheadle grew up in Lincoln. Fortenberry recently introduced the measure with Congressman Russ Carnahan (MO).

Read the full story.

Tags: Don Cheadle, Global Conservation Act, Jane Goodall, Representative Jeff Fortenberry
Posted in Global |

Round Rock woman urges feds to protect Earth’s environment

Round Rock Leader

On April 19, Round Rock resident Amy Huff joined 15 other cancer survivors and survivors of chronic diseases in Washington, D.C. to bring attention to the Global Conservation Act of 2010.

For three days, group members met with their respective states’ representatives to garner support for the bill. Huff was among the group because of her friendship with Angela Patterson, a fellow cancer survivor who blogged about her journey through cancer and treatments. It was Patterson’s blog that caught the attention of the Pew Charitable Trust, a non-profit organization based out of Washington, D.C. that hosted the group while they were there.

Huff was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2006, when she was pregnant.

Read the full story.

Tags: Global Conservation Act, medicine, survivor
Posted in Protecting Nature's Pharmacy |

The Philadelphia Examiner

The rapid loss of species and ecosystems around the world is affecting our country’s health, economy and national security according to environmental experts who spoke today at a public forum co-hosted by The Pew Charitable Trusts and the Academy of Natural Sciences.

“There is no more important issue for humanity than conserving the biological infrastructure of the planet,” said Dr. Thomas E. Lovejoy, a George Mason University professor and the biodiversity chair at the Heinz Center for Science, Economics and the Environment.

Read the full story.

Tags: Academy of Natural Sciences, biodiversity, event, Global Conservation Act, national security, Pew, Thomas E. Lovejoy
Posted in Global |

The New Yorker

Abstract:

A reporter at large about the sixth mass extinction. Describes how graduate student Karen Lips observed the mysterious disappearance of large numbers of local golden frogs, in the nineteen-nineties, at several locations in Panama and Costa Rica. Whatever was killing Lips’s frogs moved east, like a wave, across Panama. Of the many species that have existed on earth, more than ninety-nine per cent have disappeared. Yet extinction has been a much contested concept. Throughout the eighteenth century, the prevailing view was that species were fixed. Charles Darwin believed extinction happened only slowly, but he was wrong. Over the past half billion years, there have been at least twenty mass extinctions. Five of these—the so-called Big Five—were so devastating that they’re usually put in their own category. The fifth, the end-Cretaceous event, which occurred sixty-five million years ago, exterminated not just the dinosaurs but seventy-five per cent of all species on earth. Once a mass extinction occurs, it takes millions of years for life to recover, and when it does it’s generally with a new cast of characters.

Read the full story (subscription required)

Tags: Charles Darwin, Global Conservation Act
Posted in Global |

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