This brings to light some interesting questions about research funding and
the viability of proposed research projects in the short-term. Many
researchers are focusing on climate change scenarios when looking at
conservation issues and habitat modeling. The 'elephant in the room' /
'naked emperor' seems to be the predicted collapse of our North American
economies. 

People can argue that economic growth is inevitable, or perhaps that this
recent downturn in the N.A. economy is some type of short-order recession.
It may also be argued that the perfect storm of the 'credit crunch', rising
oil prices, and import-dependent economies will spark a more serious
economic depression. We may be seeing the beginnings of the latter play out
right now.

Within the ecological research community, we have not discussed this topic
in the depth that it deserves. I can see some immediate issues arising:

1) how will research be conducted when the price of gas is high, e.g.
>2.50/L. (I drove >20,000km in 3 months on a project recently) This will
increase the cost of research, especially at the landscape scale, quite
significantly.

2) where will researchers find funding when support from philanthropic
organizations dries up because of poor returns on their own invested assets?

3) how will land use, traffic models, and habitat quality shift with changes
to the rural/urban economy? there is some interesting research on the
African bushmeat economy that we could learn from; e.g. how will communities
respond to higher food costs...how will added hunting pressure for all sorts
of game affect predator prey dynamics, especially in protected areas where
poaching pressure will rise? 

I think it is past-time to bring to light a holistic discussion of how
ecology will survive, and what it will look like, as various economic
scenarios are played out.

Thank you,

Adam T. Ford
Wildlife Research Associate
Banff Wildlife Crossings Project
Western Transportation Institute-MSU Bozeman
Banff National Park
PO Box 900
Banff, AB
T1L 1K2
Canada

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