The Cause of Dodo Birds' Extinction Essay

Since the year 1662, there have been no legitimate reports of dodo bird sightings, meaning that the animal more technically known as Raphus cucullatus has been extinct for over 350 years. Most species have met extinction due to climate changes, environmental adjustments, or simply becoming prey more often than they can reproduce. In the case of dodo birds, however, humans were the cause of extinction. This is becoming a more and more common trend humans have helped destroy environments, change climate, and alter certain predator-prey relationships just for the purpose of industrialization and ultimately, money. It is natural for a person to want to make money and be financially successful, but it is clear that causing an entire species to go extinct is inhumane in a variety of ways. Sadly, the dodo bird was a helpless organism that saw its in final days due to the greed of human beings. New technology, however, will allow us to possibly resurrect extinct species using their DNA, a phenomenon that could change the earth for the better. If one species could be brought back to life, I would want it to be the intriguingly anomalous dodo bird (Raphus cucullatus) not only because I would want to see us change its evolutionary path, but because it deserves to be brought back by the very species that destroyed it. As human beings, we are responsible for bringing the dodo bird back to earth. Dodo birds were never violent, especially towards human beings, whom they were originally kind to. Before people began to kill these birds, they would approach us and try to make some sort of interaction take place. Essentially, dodo birds were curious little creatures that intended no malice towards others, yet we took advantage of their equivocal nature for our own good. Sailors who traveled to Mauritius, the island which dodo birds largely inhabited, saw opportunity in these defenseless birds and killed them to sell their feathers and...

Comments
Post a Comment