Thursday, July 16, 2026

Devolution of Life (Reverse Evolution)

         Devolution of Life (Reverse Evolution)

     “Man has reversed the process of evolution and he has put into his hands the pattern and trends as he wishes, playing the role of his Creator.” - AVR

 Dr Abe V Rotor

 
Destruction of the ecosystems

 
Dichotomy of man's future, interpretation by two artists

All living things, past and present, are progeny of evolution and are interconnected in one way or the other. And each one has a place in the phylogeny, the chart of evolution.

Imagine the organisms in countless numbers assigned in distinct groupings scientists call as “kingdoms,” with the ancient ones occupying the bottom, and the complex ones at the top. And each kingdom is divided into sub-groups arranged in the same pattern – from simple to complex members.

1. From the first Green Revolution – the transformation of man from hunter to farmer some 10,000 years ago – man has narrowed down the diversity of crops and animals according to his needs.

2. The loss of ecosystems all over the world as population and settlements continue to expand has not only predisposed species to extinction but caused permanent damage of these natural habitats, that it is virtually impossible to rebuild them back into their original states.

3. Life on earth is threatened by Global Warming which is causing sea level to rise and flood low lying area. On the hand polar ice and ice caps are melting. Global warming stirs climate change which is causing climatic disturbances. There is a increasing rate and intensity of typhoons, hurricanes, tornado, flooding, drought, and the like.

4. Pollution on land, water and air, in increasing levels brought about by industrialization, growing population and affluence of living, has triggered man-induced phenomena that threaten species and life itself.

5. Rapid population increase, industrialization and affluent living all lead to changing chemistry of the land, water and air. We do not only mix natural elements and compounds; we synthesize them into products foreign to nature. Plastics for example do not decompose, gases from car react to form acid rain, toxic metal run through the food chain and food web, and natural waterways are open sewers. These do not only disturb life; they maim, kill, annihilate; they turn productive areas into wastelands.

6. Man intrudes into the wildlife which continues to shrink. Gone is 80 percent of the rainforests of the world. Ninety percent of the coral reefs have been destroyed by over fishing and by reckless means. The grasslands are shrinking to give way to farming. The sea is being farmed. Islands are now owned by private persons and organizations.

7. Genetic engineering has broken down the barriers that separate species by directly combining genes of different organisms, thereby destroying the identity and integrity of species, and therefore change their behavior and interrelationships.

8. Evolution it seems is no longer a natural process, but one dictated by human intelligence that continues to build from the indulgence on the fruits of the “Tree of Knowledge that makes man as powerful as God,” the very thing that vanished his first ancestors from the biblical Garden of Eden.

Where have all the rice varieties gone?

There are more than 50,000 cultivars of rice presently stored in the Gene Bank of the International Rice Research Institute at UP Los BaƱos, Laguna. According to IRRI scientists this number represents but a fraction of the possibly rices (the plural of rice to denote distinct genetic variations) of the world since agriculture began some 5000 years ago or so.

Similarly at the Centro Internacional de Mejoramiento del Maiz y Trigo (CIMMYT) in Mexico the gene bank for wheat and corn faces the same problem as in rice, and if this is the case, it is logical that many varieties and cultivars of field crops we know today are but the selected few that man, the farmer, has intentionally preserved. In short, what these banks as well as those conserved by other organizations, are but the remnant of the world’s naturally occurring genetic pool on the one hand, and those genetically modified by man.

A cursory examination of rice sold in the market makes a short list of about a dozen misleading varieties as sinandomeng, wigwag, intan, which are pseudonyms to attract customers for the likeness of quality with those they have been named after.

To validate this observation through field survey one is likely to find even a simpler classification as upland and lowland rice, or aromatic, glutinous, red rice and the like.

Quaintness of farm life, a thing of the past, painting by Fernando Amorsolo
 
This is the same observation in the former prairies of North America, now the biggest cereal granary of the world extending across the Canadian border covering the provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, there are only 10 major wheat varieties planted on the vast plains. For corn, the indigenous varieties are rare to find on the farm. Hybrid corn – a cross of two or more purified varieties – makes up the bulk of corn produced. Hybrids are unstable genetically. In the succeeding generations the lose hold on the genetic vigor of their parents, resulting in drastic decline in yield.

What is the implication of narrowing down the choice of varieties to be planted commercially?

First, it will result in indirect elimination of varieties in the bottom of the list, by displacement by the preferred ones and by neglect on the [art of the farmer in maintaining them.

Second, fewer varieties planted is food security risk. Severe damage to even only one major variety is likely to result in economic disaster.

Third, the narrowing down of genetic diversity disturbs the ecosystem, laying much on man’s care the survival not only of the cultivated crops but other living things in the area as well, thus leading to the further decrease in diversity and population. The loss of diversity in cereal lands applies as well in other areas as evidenced by the following:

• Vegetables sold in the market are limited to those that are salable, leaving out those that are not, and the so-called “wild vegetables” represented by such vegetables as bagbagkong, papait, sabawil, sword bean, and alukong or himbaba-o.

• The kinds of fruits may be counted by the fingers, and like vegetables, only those that are acceptable dominate the fruit stands. Today it is rare to find such indigenous fruits as tampoy, sapote, batocanag, anonang and the native counterparts of guapple and ponderosa.

• Industrial crops are also suffering of the same fate. Take the following:

1. Dipterocarp species of forest trees (narra family) are now endangered. These include apitong , yakal, tanguili, and guijo.

2. Fiber plants such as maguey (Agave family), ramie, kenaf, jute, abaca, have bee vastly neglected since the introduction of synthetics fibers.

3. Today bamboo groves occupy the fringes of wastelands and certain watershed areas. Traditional bamboo areas, like the Dipterocarp forests, are vanishing, so with many of the species and variety of this so-called giant grass.

4. The increasing demand for firewood has decimated many indigenous sources, what with the open exploitation for day-to-day gathering of firewood in marginal communities. These include madre de cacao, ipil-ipil, acacia, and aroma.

5. Even plants of medicinal value are being exploited severely such as quinine for malaria, banaba for kidney trouble, derris for insect control.

6. Seaweeds suffer the same fate as more resorts are put up, aquaculture selective only to those species of major importance are raised, deleterious effects of pollution, notwithstanding.

Agriculture, the Nemesis of Biodiversity Conservation

Whenever a land is cleared for agriculture five consequences are likely to happen. These are

• Direct elimination of plants and animals which interferes and does not constitute or conform with farming practices.

• Breaking up of the food chain and therefore, the disruption of the food web leads to the disorganization of the ecosystem. For example, a swamp converted into riceland will necessarily lose its natural biological and ecological properties. Loss of habitats results in migration or death of affected species.

• Modern agriculture, with the use of chemical pesticides and fertilizers, is destructive to the ecosystem.

Mismanagement leads not only to loss in productivity, as shown in this formula.

Biotic Potential = Carrying Capacity/Productivity over Environmental Resistance

The Carrying Capacity of an ecosystem is dependent upon favorable biological factors (biotic potential), which in turn is affected by the presence of factors that negate them (environmental resistance), among which are lack of water, poor soil condition, and destructive activities of man.

Decreasing productivity therefore, means decreasing biodiversity – which means devolution of life. ~

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

EcoArt: Ecology - Art and Science (Article in Progress)

EcoArt 
Ecology: Art and Science
Artworks as Teaching Aids

Dr Abe V Rotor

After a flood scene

 
Juvenile brain coral geometry

 
Paper wasp hexagon cells

Limestone, sedimentary rock model

Mud dauber wasp nest

Petrified or fossilized wood

Chalky fossil of elephant's task.

Silkworms, composite relief painting

Mounted moths- wall decor and specimens

Crown of thorns from Wild Cherry

Calabash piggy bank

Bird's nest, a simulated model

 
 
Children's art workshop under the trees
Driftwood art and fossils

Pomposity of Colors in Plants: Nature's tool for beauty and survival

Pomposity of Colors in Plants
Nature's tool for beauty and survival

Dr Abe V Rotor


Butterfly plant, what a coincidence
     in form and structure, and color;
I'd rather say, a case of mimicry,
     mutual advantage and favor.


Angel's trumpet, flimsy sinister, heralding
     not of victory but defeat;
Narcotics its essence, abuse its courtship,
     to the unwary on a dark street.


Balibago - white in the morning pink later -
     your secret of a short lived;
you must court the sun and bee without delay,
     in the act of make believe.


Mickey mouse the male, Minnie mouse the female,
     both flowers born on one plant;
If ever Disney got the idea from this plant, he's right,
     mystery is what people want.


Begonia, frail and dainty, and easy to wilt
     must shout its color to the butterfly and bee,
else its flowers like spinsters just fade away
     sad and lonely though colorful and free.


Caladium - but you are not a flower and far from one;
     yet you are an apple to the eye of the beholder;
whatever perceptions you create to your pollinators,
     count me as one, your ardent gardener. 


Caballero, title of a noble horseman, 
     wakes with the sun, retires at sundown,
season after season blooms the color of gold;
      tell me where your treasure is found. 


Puff lilies, forerunner of summer in the garden,
suddenly transforming it into a piece of Eden.


Tabernamontana pandakaki - what a name!
whatever that is, bears flowers a gyre of stars
in pure white shining in some forgotten corner
of a garden where other plants are scarce ~

Monday, July 13, 2026

EcoArt: Greening Our Home

Evolution of Art
EcoArt: Greening Our Home  

Dr Abe V Rotor

Aesthetics and function in greening our home lifts the soul;
    green the most restful color, soothing, easy to the eye;
buffer against noise, dust and wind, cleanliness our main goal;
    a world we call home sweet home, in song and smile.

“Green is the prime color of the world, and that from which its loveliness arises.” – Pedro Calderón de la Barca 

 
Potted plants by the window grill merged into an integral scene of trees and lianas, to connect house and garden

“Live simply so others can simply live.” – Mahatma Gandhi 

 
Left: Potted cactus with "man-heaven- earth" motif.  Right, wind chime hangs on a mural. Together, they welcome guests at the doorway.

Bring nature to your home,
for the elders and children,
through the magic of art
and warmth of a friend
 
 
 
The art in the garden is expressed simply and naturally like the shape and formation of leaves and flowers, type of growth, plant arrangement, singly or in combination.

Indigenous these plants are, their care simple, if needed at all.
lies the secret of green thumb in the Garden before the Fall.    

“Green living is not perfection; it is persistent intention.” – Davina Cole 

 
Trees are clothed with lianas and epiphytes.  On the ground are fern and seasonal plants, Between big trees are shrubs and hedges. Make a group of trees an arboretum or a miniature forest, which also serves as a botanical collection. 

Forest in our garden, around our home,
abode of creatures, tame and wild;
could art enhance this union and harmony,
for man to appreciate and provide?  

“The smallest seed of care can grow forests of renewal.” – Jonah Sylver 

 
Garden pond of Pistia and hornwort

Invigorating emerald green 
carpet of calm and serene;
beneath, fish seldom seen,
completes our world on screen.

"We are not above nature, we are a part of nature." — Jennifer Nini

Now and then there is need to prune the trees.  This allows other plants to grow,
and induce old ones to form new crown.  Cut dead branches for safety reason. 

“Being green and clean is not just an aspiration but an action.” – Christine Pelosi  

  
 Symmetry - radial and bilateral - is key to nature's art.  The garden is also a living laboratory. Study Fibonacci's principle, Linnaeus systematic nomenclature, Darwin's theory, among other studies.

The garden: workshop and laboratory,
art and science, hobby and study;
rules and theory, history and posterity,
knowledge, quest, and mystery.

“A cleaner world starts at home: choose, refuse, repair, repeat.” – Marco Reyes 

Space for a plaza, for picnic, strolling, outdoor game and gathering. 

Reminiscent of Thoreau's Walden*
 a forest clearing gives freedom,
space to reach out to heaven;
from disobedience and boredom.

Walden or Life in the Woods by American transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau. The book is about simple living in a natural surrounding. Before settling for a year in the woods, Thoreau wrote a controversial essay, Of Civil Disobedience. ~