Reducing Humanity (Plant Wars, Final Chapter)

in #fiction7 years ago

Picture

Introduction, Chapter 1, Chapter 2, Chapter 3

It had taken some centuries of worsening circumstances to get rid of the thread humanity posed but in the end, the efforts were rewarded.

The human population had been reduced to just under 2 billion people who now lived in small communities scattered over the world. Most of them weren’t even able to interact with each other anymore, as a huge part of the global infrastructure was destroyed.

Nobody had noticed the creeping danger, not at first. But when scientists finally realized that nature was turning against humanity, that they were being attacked by plants, the group of organisms they had always seen as harmless, it had been too late.

More and more people died because of various reasons. Food sources were destroyed by aggressive invasive species that made any kind of farming impossible. Allergic reactions to pollen had become so prevalent that most governments had issued a form of modified gas masks to protect the population. Harmful algae bloom contaminated the fresh water all over the globe. Formerly harmless and even healthy food sources turned toxic.

There had been attempts to counteract the effects. Attempts to fight this war against nature and, if possible, win. But it hadn’t been possible. Genetically engineered crops failed to thrive. Herbicides lost their effectiveness. Medication couldn’t save anyone anymore.

Then the birth rates had started to drop and the children that were born rarely survived. Humanity adapted, but slowly. And when the selective pressure had finally created a human race that was able to withstand all the issues, the population had shrunk to a minimum.

Most knowledge from the time before the plants had turned on humans had been lost. There were tales of great technology and a growing society, but also warnings about pollution and death.

A lot of the pollution could still be found. Islands made of plastic were swimming in the oceans. Nuclear power plants leaked their radiation and created death zones. Toxic heavy metals, stored in landfills trickled into the rising groundwater which made ancient roads collapse into sinkholes.

Humanity had changed the earth for tens of thousands of years, even before they industrialized everything. It was impossible for nature to recover everything, to heal completely. But humanity didn’t threaten to destroy it anymore and recovery was finally possible.

The Great Consciousness was satisfied. Humanities destructiveness had been limited and now the humans had a new chance to define their place in the world.

There was hope that this time, it wouldn’t end in a disaster.


References:

Cut world population and redistribute resources, expert urges
Scientists say that ‘nature,’ untouched by humans, is now almost entirely gone
Earth Without People


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Picture taken from pixabay.com

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Nice bite size moment of fantasy and reflection - cheers

Many people died in various ways, such as the deaths of people in aceh 300,000 souls in 1 minute in 2004.

This is how mother nature does her negative feed back loops, no one or nothing gets to dominate, unfortunately species com and go. We human might happens to be just one, if we still choose to live the way we use to be.

Over population will definitely be one of the major factors that push us to end ourselves. Either through intraspecies warfares or over exploiting the planet and release some deadly new pathogens.

Hope we realise that in time =]

A really nice series!! I guess most of the people actually aware of the issue, but the major problem go to profit maximization in the industry, and competition between countries:
Having all the waste disposed to public area, toxic ashes from incineration without proper treatment......
Perhaps only when human start disppearing, Earth will get back to a situation like Angkor Wat
btw the photo you shown remind me the remains in Chernobyl

Beautifully written and depressingly relevant! Thank you for sharing.

It will always ends up in disaster — that's how nature rolls. That's how we came to be. That's why and how we evolve.

That was very well written. Around my own industrial city, I have seen many such scenes where nature takes back ownership! Its crazy how fast it can happen. Once humans are gone, nature starts to work immediately to fix what we may have damaged.

nice sharing

Oh, no! Why did the story have to end so soon? Humans didn't fight back hard enough? All in all, an excellent series @suesa... one I totally enjoyed reading. Cheers! - @sandzat

Could you share your source for the photo? Many years ago I went on a binge of finding photos of abandoned amusement parks online, and I think I'm about to be triggered into doing so again.

As mentioned at the bottom of the post, it's from pixabay.com :)
Just look for "abandoned building"

Derp, it does say that. I missed it. Sorry.

It happens :P

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