I recently read that Gary Hebl, a Wisconsin legislator, has nominated the
cheese-making bacterium Lactococcus Lactis to be the state microbe. I really
like this idea and suggest that ecologists should think about this as a
serious development with implications for biodiversity conservation and
other ecological issues.

For centuries the scientific community has been in conflict with general
society about whether form or function is important in dealing with the
natural world. Ben Franklin advocated that the turkey should be the official
bird of the USA, but the bald eagle won out and the wild turkey ended up as
the symbol of a brand of whiskey. Today's ENGOs focus on cute baby seals and
cuddly pandas and there is little public concern for the segmented worms
that are essential to most of our ecosystems. (I wrote a paper on this that
has been rejected by several journals for its non-scientific language,
available at http://bill.silvert.org/pdf/Biodiversity.pdf). If we can
generate some degree of public attention for organisms which are important
because of what they do rather than how nice they look, then I think we will
have made real progress in gaining popular support for meaningful measures
to conserve biodiversity.

Bill Silvert

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