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Out of Eden: An Odyssey of Ecological Invasion

Out of Eden: An Odyssey of Ecological Invasion
By Alan Burdick

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Now as never before, exotic animals and plants are crossing the globe, borne on the swelling tide of human traffic to places where nature never intended them to be. Bird-eating snakes hitchhike to Hawaii in the landing gear of airliners; pernicious European zebra mussels, riding in ships’ ballast water, disrupt aquatic ecosystems across the United States; feral camels and poisonous foreign toads plague Australia; giant Indonesian pythons lurk beneath homes in suburban Miami. As alien species jump from place to place and increasingly crowd native and endangered species out of existence, biologists speak fearfully of “the homogenization of the world.” Never mind bulldozers and pesticides: the fastestgrowing threat to biological diversity may be nature itself.  Out of Eden is a dazzling personal journey through this strange and shifting landscape. Alan Burdick tours the front lines of ecological invasion in the company of world-class scientists: in Hawaii, Tasmania, Guam, San Francisco; in lush rain forests, aboard an Alaska-bound oil tanker, inside a spacecraft-assembly facility at NASA. Wry and reflective, animated and provocative, Out of Eden is a search both for scientific answers and for ecological authenticity, from a writer of remarkable range and talent.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #584984 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-05-02
  • Released on: 2006-05-02
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. To be human is to change our habitat; this is one of the many insights in this thought-provoking account on the ecology of invasions, a hot new science in which new discoveries swiftly overturn old theories. Now that our habitat is global, creatures emigrate with us at an ever-accelerating pace, carried in ship ballast (a bivalve mollusk from England to Massachusetts), imported by nostalgic birders (once native birds returning from disappearance) or crawling into airplanes on their own (the brown tree snake from Australia to Hawaii). Even NASA's space probes carry potential invaders. If these creatures make new homes for themselves, they may eat other species into extinction, infect them with new diseases, even reconfigure an entire ecosystem. Burdick's fascination with the science is contagious, and he does a superior job of conveying the salient points of classic experiments. The Discover senior editor is at his best following invasion ecologists—a lively bunch—as they do their gritty, often ambiguous research in Guam and Hawaii, along the margins of the San Francisco Bay and on the deck of an oil tanker. His vivid descriptions add the pleasure of travelogue to the intellectual satisfactions of science: "Travel is a weekend away, a reward upon retirement, a chance gift won in a game show or a sweepstakes. Honey, we're going to Hawaii! Applied by biologists to nonhuman organisms, the phenomenon is known as the ecological sweepstakes, and it explains how life arrives at a place like Hawaii to begin with." This is a captivating book with wide-ranging appeal. 6 illus. Agent, Flip Brophy. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From School Library Journal
Adult/High School–Increasingly, exotic animals and plants have been migrating to new environments, resulting in a phenomenon that biologists call the homogenization of the world. Burdick's journey found him searching for the brown tree snake (indigenous to Australia) in Hawaii–once a paradise without serpents–and visiting NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in the foothills of Pasadena, CA, where scientists take extreme measures to make sure that we neither introduce nor bring back alien species in our exploration of space. He had set out to solve an ecological riddle; but as he followed invasion biologists fighting exotic invaders in Tasmania, Guam, and San Francisco, his observations led him to ask philosopical questions about the nature of the natural world. Teens curious about natural history and its odd permutations will be fascinated by this lyrical treatise.–Pat Bangs, Fairfax County Public Library, VA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The New Yorker
When alien species are introduced into new territories, they often imperil ecosystems, threatening native species with extinction. The ecology of invasion is, in consequence, a burgeoning field, and Burdick's survey follows herpetologists to the jungles of Guam, where they track the infamous brown tree snake, which arrived around 1949 and decimated the local bird population. He explores underground lava tubes with an entomologist studying the waning song of insect plant-hoppers; and he helps strain ballast water from tankers in San Francisco Bay, where non-native zooplankton are elbowing their way into the food chain. The long spans of evolutionary history and the speed of change make for some dizzying contrasts. Ninety per cent of Hawaii's native species are found nowhere else on earth, and the honeycreeper, a songbird currently depleted by avian malaria, first inhabited islands in the archipelago that have long since vanished into the sea.
Copyright © 2005 The New Yorker


Customer Reviews

A Most Worthy Read5
A worthy and timely read, providing a provocative and literary exploration of a topic that is of growing prominence and debate. It is a book to love for its exploration of a fascinating and timely subject, for the writing itself, and for Burdick's adeptness at taking the reader along for a remarkable exploration.

Burdick deserves high praise (which he is getting - see professional reviews) for the width and breadth of his research, travels and writing. The writing is wonderfully descriptive and poetic, the facts, processes and theories of invasive species biology and research are artfully described. These qualities, I believe, assure that the book will prove stimulating and readily enjoyable to readers who might not stray into the natural history and science fields otherwise.

Excellent Book5
Who knew that a book about such a serious topic could be so witty and fun to read. Burdick takes the reader on an excellent world tour -- and he makes a the best sort of travel companion.

If you're tired of the shrill discourse that surrounds ecological matters, you'll welcome this book. Burdick has no axe to grind. He clearly went out to report on this complicated topic with an open mind. What does it mean to label something an invasive species? Can a non-native spieces increase the biodiversity of an ecosystem? Given that humans are the ultimate invasive species, what are our hopes for curbing the spread of other organisms? It's enjoyable to watch a savvy and smart journalist really think about these questions.

Snakes, copepods and NASA's contribution5
A growing debate over "saving" endangered species has generated a rise in ecological studies. We too often view the issues raised in these discussion in too large a framework. Dams and chemicals savage habitat. Denuded rainforests reduce rain and reduce oxygen output. Disruption of the "balance of nature" must be stopped and reversed, according to environmental campaigners. There is another element rarely considered in ecological studies - how humans have been and are introducing new species into global habitats. Alan Burdick spent much of the past decade talking to the people who are investigating this phenomenon. This book is the result of his "odyssey". In a superb investigating account, he reveals what work has been achieved and what more is needed. Both accomplishments and unfinished studies are staggering in their scope and importance.

Opening his travel narrative with one of the more noted ecological disasters, he tours Guam, where an Australian reptile, the brown tree snake, devastated the indigenous species. Guam's isolation had protected its wildlife from major predators and thus was vulnerable to this invader. From the mid-Pacific, he visits Hawai'i [which he's careful to spell correctly, but only for a while]. The snake has almost certainly arrived in that State, but has been preceded by more notorious invaders - rats, goats and pigs. In Hawai'i, the pig occupies a less absolute value as an "alien" species. The Polynesian settlers brought pigs of their own all those hundreds of years ago. This "domestic" version is a major item in Hawai'ian culture, and hunting it is beset with ritual. It is reputed to be less destructive than the "wild" pigs left by Cook and other Europeans. Burdick explains how its uprooting practices might add new habitat to forest species. It is at this point that he introduces the problem of assessing just what values we must consider in determining what is "natural".

With millennia of species' movements throughout the world, humans don't have sufficient record of how various organisms have shifted location and how much they might have changed original habitats. The introduction of the brown tree snake is set in time - post World War II. How do we compare that to Darwin's Finches on the Galapagos? New species either fit into the existing environment or change it to a new stability. Burdick examines these questions in both biological and philosophical frameworks. Yet, as he makes clear, the philosophical resolution must await more research information.

For more detailed biological research Burdick returns to the mainland. Travelling with Jim Carlton, one of the heroes of this tale, he follows a team around San Francisco Bay. The Bay, a major Pacific port, receives millions of litres of "ballast water" every year. Picked up at points of origin almost anywhere in the world, this water keeps ships stable. The water, with all the marine organisms it contains, is dumped on arrival. Jim Carlton's team is not only counting and typing the organisms, they are trying to understand how the "invaders" react with the present environment. The research isn't confined to one area and some surprising results are described.

Far distant from San Francisco Bay, James Drake in Knoxville, Tennessee, performed a series of lab experiments. He sequentially added "new" species in controlled environments. Expecting to see the "intruders" overwhelming the prior organisms or be rejected, he was astonished to discover the intruders and "indigenous" organisms fit in without rancour. Even though each had but limited resources and occupied the same "niche", both survived intact. To Carlton, this study indicated that all the classical theories of "biogeography" need to be reconsidered - perhaps "turned on its head". In effect, introduced species can create "alternative" ecosystems. The result, as Carlton emphasizes, is that we have little idea of what a "natural" ecosystem actually is. Carlton's plea for more research and new students to perform it is a cry from the heart. The work is neither glamourous nor personally rewarding, but is essential to understanding ecological impact. Legislation is pending on the issue of ballast water dumping, but information remains insufficient to posit specifics.

The mass of world trade moves across the seas from point to point - ballast water being taken up and dumped with little idea of what it contains. Fleets of aircraft, carrying snakes, lizards or other durable animals, depart and land with crews unaware of the stowaways. What impact these conveyed intruders have remains a mystery in most places. There are new species of bacilli in one of NASA's "clean rooms" waiting hitch a ride to Mars and Europa. Are they invaders, modified from an organism carried in or something that evolved within the facility? Burdick echoes Carlton's call, reminding us that we haven't had enough time to assess the results of these transportations. Since we don't know what "unadulterated nature" is, we may be ignorantly suffering from changes. To Burdick and many of those he interviewed, "we must guard against everything". That's a big task. To learn how big, read this account. Then pass it on to your children. They are that new generation of researchers. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]