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"This instant and global communication, it's just a human instinct to read mystery and portents of dangers and wondrous things in events that are unusual," Wilson told The Associated Press on Thursday. "Not to worry, these are not portents that the world is about to come to an end." Wilson and the others say instant communications -- especially when people can whip out smart phones to take pictures of critter carcasses and then post them on the Internet
-- is giving a skewed view of what is happening in the environment. The irony is that mass die-offs -- usually of animals with large populations
-- are getting the attention while a larger but slower mass extinction of thousands of species because of human activity is ignored, Wilson said. ___ Online: USGS:
http://www.nwhc.usgs.gov/
mortality_events/ongoing.jsp
[Associated
Press;
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