Berliner Boersenzeitung - In Darwin's wake: Two-year global conservation voyage sparks hope

EUR -
AED 4.228872
AFN 71.972068
ALL 95.909842
AMD 434.62105
ANG 2.060869
AOA 1055.922261
ARS 1612.664041
AUD 1.626132
AWG 2.075573
AZN 1.962349
BAM 1.950864
BBD 2.321646
BDT 141.447046
BGN 1.897259
BHD 0.434591
BIF 3421.857394
BMD 1.151497
BND 1.469501
BOB 7.96509
BRL 6.015764
BSD 1.152694
BTN 106.183656
BWP 15.53909
BYN 3.398317
BYR 22569.334493
BZD 2.318365
CAD 1.568033
CDF 2507.959919
CHF 0.903603
CLF 0.026455
CLP 1044.636615
CNY 7.906464
CNH 7.925002
COP 4261.550951
CRC 543.330067
CUC 1.151497
CUP 30.514661
CVE 109.985776
CZK 24.434471
DJF 205.274212
DKK 7.472194
DOP 70.41277
DZD 152.14506
EGP 60.26191
ERN 17.27245
ETB 179.932431
FJD 2.545929
FKP 0.859123
GBP 0.862707
GEL 3.126354
GGP 0.859123
GHS 12.489347
GIP 0.859123
GMD 84.64225
GNF 10105.34523
GTQ 8.839097
GYD 241.164032
HKD 9.012851
HNL 30.512273
HRK 7.534821
HTG 150.989955
HUF 389.892131
IDR 19472.95998
ILS 3.606085
IMP 0.859123
INR 106.44101
IQD 1510.053265
IRR 1522019.494717
ISK 144.385837
JEP 0.859123
JMD 180.413545
JOD 0.816388
JPY 183.355687
KES 148.831121
KGS 100.697856
KHR 4626.275212
KMF 490.537296
KPW 1036.385217
KRW 1720.37028
KWD 0.353567
KYD 0.960595
KZT 564.217802
LAK 24695.163427
LBP 103228.165394
LKR 358.385716
LRD 210.95726
LSL 19.043312
LTL 3.40007
LVL 0.696529
LYD 7.357322
MAD 10.802176
MDL 20.016878
MGA 4777.973736
MKD 61.615023
MMK 2418.166226
MNT 4111.007847
MOP 9.292973
MRU 45.808704
MUR 52.864827
MVR 17.790309
MWK 1998.877461
MXN 20.552114
MYR 4.521965
MZN 73.591629
NAD 19.042487
NGN 1603.874006
NIO 42.424139
NOK 11.142746
NPR 169.893849
NZD 1.964862
OMR 0.442747
PAB 1.152724
PEN 3.944657
PGK 4.971379
PHP 68.561306
PKR 322.020359
PLN 4.26854
PYG 7463.1826
QAR 4.202604
RON 5.093645
RSD 117.390523
RUB 91.720314
RWF 1685.280067
SAR 4.320981
SBD 9.264001
SCR 15.257101
SDG 692.049195
SEK 10.754691
SGD 1.472235
SHP 0.863921
SLE 28.314872
SLL 24146.308417
SOS 657.650391
SRD 43.027403
STD 23833.655954
STN 24.438382
SVC 10.086393
SYP 127.674885
SZL 19.048221
THB 37.022348
TJS 11.04889
TMT 4.030238
TND 3.388926
TOP 2.772528
TRY 50.798269
TTD 7.822277
TWD 36.760144
TZS 2993.891239
UAH 51.039225
UGX 4315.120012
USD 1.151497
UYU 46.092982
UZS 13988.486971
VES 503.96085
VND 30255.574683
VUV 137.716839
WST 3.12565
XAF 654.298751
XAG 0.01351
XAU 0.000224
XCD 3.111977
XCG 2.077516
XDR 0.812706
XOF 654.335594
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.741289
ZAR 19.283306
ZMK 10364.857819
ZMW 22.392028
ZWL 370.781454
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5500

    16.95

    -3.24%

  • BTI

    0.4700

    59.63

    +0.79%

  • CMSC

    -0.1250

    23.115

    -0.54%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    14.38

    -0.14%

  • RELX

    -0.2850

    34.475

    -0.83%

  • BP

    0.7450

    42.305

    +1.76%

  • GSK

    -1.0150

    54.135

    -1.87%

  • RIO

    -0.4600

    91.62

    -0.5%

  • AZN

    -1.4100

    191.9

    -0.73%

  • BCE

    -0.0950

    25.795

    -0.37%

  • CMSD

    -0.0850

    23.065

    -0.37%

  • NGG

    1.9200

    91.61

    +2.1%

  • BCC

    -1.9400

    69.96

    -2.77%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    12.99

    +1.08%

In Darwin's wake: Two-year global conservation voyage sparks hope
In Darwin's wake: Two-year global conservation voyage sparks hope / Photo: Robin Utrecht - ANP/AFP

In Darwin's wake: Two-year global conservation voyage sparks hope

After a two-year around-the-world ocean voyage inspired by Charles Darwin, scientists and crew sailed home on a historic vessel into Rotterdam Thursday bearing a warning about climate change -- but also a message of hope.

Text size:

The majestic three-masted Oosterschelde, the last remaining vessel from a fleet of Dutch schooners that criss-crossed the globe in the early 20th century, arrived to a welcome befitting a voyage of more than 40,000 nautical miles (74,000 kilometres, 46,000 miles).

Ceremonially escorted by more than a dozen vessels ranging from tall ships to steamships, all blaring horns, the Oosterschelde received a "water cannon salute" from fire service boats, as hundreds waved and cheered from the banks.

Like Darwin in 1831, the Oosterschelde departed the British port of Plymouth in August 2023 to embark on a voyage of discovery that took in the major stops explored during the British naturalist's world-changing mission aboard the HMS Beagle.

From the Falkland Islands to the southern tips of Africa, South America and Australia, the trip closely shadowed Darwin's voyage that inspired his groundbreaking theory of natural selection described in "On the Origin of Species".

Aboard the Oosterschelde at various points of the voyage were some of the world's best young conservationists, 100 scientists aged 18-25, selected to study a species also observed by Darwin, himself aged 22 at the time of his trip.

Giant tortoises, Chilean dolphins, and howler monkeys were just some of the weird and wonderful creatures the young "Darwin Leaders" investigated, tracking changes since their appearance in "Origin of Species" two centuries ago.

With "online classrooms" onboard and slick social media output, the mission also hoped to inspire a new generation around the message: "Conservation isn't about what we've lost, it's about protecting what we still have."

- 'Barely anything left' -

One of the Darwin Leaders, 23-year-old Lotta Baten, spent a week on the ship and conducted a study into the impact of tourism on forests in Tenerife, Spain.

She said only roughly four percent of the forest that Darwin would have seen from the Beagle is still alive today, with much torn down to support the tourism industry.

"There's barely anything left, mainly the strips around the coast," the Dutch-German scientist told AFP.

She said it was "quite something" to follow in the footsteps of Darwin, but noted that the botanist's legacy is divided, as a European in colonial times.

"He basically explored and discovered things that maybe had already been explored and discovered by people at the places themselves. And then he claimed he discovered them," said Baten.

Science co-ordinator Rolf Schreuder admitted that "it's not a rosy picture", with habitat loss and climate change all transforming the environment beyond what Darwin would have recognised.

"You see the natural world degrading in many places," the 55-year-old told AFP.

But Schreuder, like many on board, found the mission inspiring rather than depressing.

He ran more than 100 local projects during the trip with people seeking to preserve their landscapes.

"We met so many great people that are actually on the ground working on the survival of those species," he said.

He found himself inspired too by the young scientists, "full of ideas, full of commitment and determination to really make a difference."

- 'Do another tour' -

Crew member Daan van Roosmalen was a boy of 17 when he set sail on the Oosterschelde. He returned to his native Netherlands having just turned 19.

"I've just been to so many places. To the Galapagos Islands, French Polynesia. We went so far away and to then sail back up this river and see the skyline of Rotterdam again is just super special," he told AFP.

He said he hoped the round-the-world voyage completed by scientists and crew his age would send a message to his generation.

"I think it's very important that we keep inspiring young people to look after our world, because we are going to be the ones taking over," he said.

"So to see all these young conservationists putting so much effort in Mother Earth... I think that should inspire more people to also take care of our planet."

And what of Darwin, the inspiration behind the mission?

"I would say he would have been enthused by his fellow young people taking care of this natural world, which he described so nicely," said Schreuder.

"I think he would hop on this boat again and do another tour."

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)