Peter Kareiva
Peter Kareiva is chief scientist at The Nature Conservancy, where he is responsible for developing and helping to implement science-based conservation throughout the organization and for forging new linkages with partners.
In addition to a long academic career, he has worked at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and directed the Northwest Fisheries Science Center Conservation Biology Division. His current projects emphasize the interplay of human land-use and biodiversity, resilience in the face of global change, and marine conservation.
Posts by Peter Kareiva:
Worry About Air Pollution, Not Just Climate Change
Yes, global warming is a big deal and a big challenge. But sometimes I get so frustrated by conservation and environmental NGO’s for not being able to chew gum and walk at the same time — in other words, for failing to appreciate the real lesson of greenhouse gas emissions.
The real lesson is there is [...]
Posted: October 29th, 2009 under Air Pollution, Animals, Asia Pacific, Birds, China, Climate Change, North America, Protected Areas, The Nature Conservancy.
Tags: air pollution, Arctic haze, asthma ozone, Climate Change, Copenhagen, dust storm West, EPA greenhouse gas, global nature, global pollution, global warming, greenhouse gas emissions, greenhouse gases, mercury, mercury baby, mercury healthy, mercury wildlife, National Academy air pollution, National Academy of Sciences, Nature Conservancy air pollution, Nature Conservancy climate, organic pollutant health, ozone, particulate matter, particulate matter health, persistent organic pollutants, Peter Kareiva, pollution agreement, pollution biodiversity
Comments: 5
Why Do We Fall in Love with Nature? And Does It Mean Conservation is in Trouble?
I have made a habit of asking ardent supporters of conservation — from members of The Nature Conservancy’s board of directors to the volunteer docents at a neighborhood nature reserve — why they care about conservation. The answer, almost inevitably, is some memorable or inspiring experience in nature.
So what will happen if future generations of [...]
Posted: October 7th, 2009 under Conservation Issues, Green Living.
Tags: backpack hiking nature, children environment, children nature, conservation blog, kids and nature, kids get outside, kids nature, love nature, Oliver Pergams, Patrcia Zaradic, Peter Kareiva, PLoS Online nature
Comments: 20
When Climate Change Demands a New Nature, Will We Be Ready?
In 50 years, many parts of the world will be unrecognizable because of climate change, population growth, shifting agriculture, new energy sources, hundreds of new cities and imperiled water supplies. The pressures of the climate crisis, coupled with the global recession, are pushing the conservation movement to reexamine many of its core assumptions.
There is a [...]
Posted: September 30th, 2009 under Climate Change, Climate Science & Research, Conservation Issues, Science, The Nature Conservancy.
Tags: adaptation, Climate Change, climate change adapation, climate change impacts, climate change worry, climate clinic, climate nature, climate trends, Climate Wizard, Emma Marris, Erika Zavaleta, global warming nature, Jon Hoekstra, Karen Poiani, Nature Conservancy climate, NATURE magazine, novel ecosystem, Peter Kareiva, University of California
Comments: 2
Scientific Illiteracy Threatens Our Future…and It’s Scientists’ Fault
You have all heard the statistics that nearly one-half of all Americans do not think humans evolved from apes, and that about one in five American adults think the sun orbits the Earth.
Scientific illiteracy is not just a matter for elitist smugness — it can endanger the innocent. For example, there is a movement [...]
Posted: August 3rd, 2009 under Climate Change, Climate Science & Research, Conservation Issues, Media, Science, The Nature Conservancy, United States.
Tags: Americans evolution, autism vaccination science, Chris Mooney, CNN environment reporting, CNN science, CNN science reporting, CNN technology unit, CP Snow, environment children, environment health, environment job security, environment national security, Jenny McCarthy autism, Nature Conservancy science, Peter Kareiva, President's Council on Environmental Quality, science boring, science communication, scientific illiteracy, scientist boring, scientist communication, Sheril Kirshenbaum, The Two Cultures, Unscientific America
Comments: 13
Should Protected Areas Be Reexamined?
I am going to commit conservation heresy and ask out loud: Should the conservation movement be proud of the 108,000 protected areas around the world it has thus far helped establish?
I have many reasons for asking that question, but among those reasons is certainly Mark Dowie’s recently published book Conservation Refugees: The Hundred-Year Conflict [...]
Posted: May 19th, 2009 under Conservation Issues, The Nature Conservancy.
Tags: biodiversity, conservation indigenous, Conservation International, conservation refugees, conservation refugees review, indigenous people, Mark Dowie, MIT Press, nature reserve, people rights conservation, Peter Kareiva, population nature, Protected Areas, wwf
Comments: 10
Children and Their Carbon Legacy: A Way to be an Eco-Hero?
There are carbon calculators galore on the web — including The Nature Conservancy’s very own. These calculators allow you to figure out how your activities and lifestyle contribute to the carbon emissions that are responsible for the climate disruption the world now faces.
Rarely, however, does one see any discussion of what population growth means for [...]
Posted: March 11th, 2009 under Climate Change, Energy, Green Living, United States.
Tags: Bangladesh, car, carbon calculator, carbon emissions, CFL, Climate Feedback, consumption, Global Environmental Change, Peter Kareiva, population, recycling
Comments: 14
Climate Change: Adapt or Die
If you stop 100 people on the street and ask them about climate change, 87 of them would know something about it, according to polls.
But if you asked the same 100 people if they’ve ever heard of “adaptation to climate change,” I bet you’d get 100 blank stares.
That’s a problem.
For sure, we need those 87 [...]
Posted: January 29th, 2009 under Climate Change, Deserts and Aridlands, Forests, Green Living, Oceans & Coasts.
Tags: adaptation, carbon emissions, Climate Change, islands, Peter Kareiva, PNAS, weather
Comments: 2
Can Nature’s Value Alone Save Nature?
You cannot read about conservation these days and not notice the astonishing zeal for ecosystem services as a new conservation strategy. (The February 2009 special issue of the Ecological Society of America’s journal Frontiers of Ecology and the Environment is a good case in point, although it’s not online yet.)
The idea behind ecosystem services is [...]
Posted: January 21st, 2009 under Conservation Issues, Ecosystem Services, Fresh Water, Policy, Rainforests.
Tags: China, coffee, Ecological Society of America, ecology, Ecosystem Services, Fresh Water, Markets, Peter Kareiva, Rainforests, sustainability, Taylor Ricketts, USDA, watershed, wetlands
Comments: 2
World-Class Environmental Scientists Take Leadership Positions on Obama’s Team
I follow politics, and love to argue and discuss the subject with friends. But usually conservation science and scientists are on the outside looking in – external voices trying to influence federal policy.
That situation, however, just changed. President-elect Barack Obama has appointed two of the United States’ most prominent environmental and conservation scientists to [...]
Posted: January 16th, 2009 under Policy, Science, United States.
Tags: ecology, Jane Lubchenco, John Holdren, NOAA, Obama
Comments: none




