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wildtype | 12 years ago

Carying capacity for human increase, while decreasing carying capacity for other species.

discuss

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lutusp|12 years ago

Yes, that's true, but it's a temporary adjustment, always followed by mass death. This is easily shown in the laboratory -- in the first phase of a multi-species model, one species wipes out all the others. Then the winners turn on themselves.

chr1|12 years ago

We are in that temporary zone for quite some time already, and all we need is 100~200 years more until we can get colonies on other planets.

If by some miracle human population was reduced to say 1bln it would make space colonies much less likely, and we'll slowly eat out our petri dish without a chance to enlarge it.

IsThisObvious|12 years ago

Some other species: things like raccoons, crows, cows, pigeons, rats, mice, dogs, house cats, etc are all likely to thrive.

pyre|12 years ago

Depends on what you mean by "thrive." Many of them will "thrive" in conditions that it would be illegal to put a human into. I'm not sure if I call that "thriving."