Living coelacanths: Values, eco-ethics and human responsibility

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Abstract

Coelacanths Latimeria chalumnae are the only living representatives of crossopterygian fish close to the roots of our own vertebrate history and therefore occupy a unique position among living fossils. L. chalumnae has become a synonym for long evolutionary age, timeless existence, tenacity, immortality and links to old roots, appearing in language, poetry, fiction and many art forms. It is a symbol of a new national identity in the Comoro Archipelago, Western Indian Ocean. I consider here the intrinsic and extrinsic value of coelacanths and the role of these fish in biodiversity conservation. The fate of coelacanths lies in our hands. It will be a measure of the success or failure of 'eco-ethics' as recently defined and called for by ecologists.

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Fricke, H. (1997). Living coelacanths: Values, eco-ethics and human responsibility. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 161, 1–15. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps161001

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