It is interesting and informative, but I think the point I was making is not changed. Population is counted in numbers. We should not be unconcerned that there are so few blue whales left in the world, simply because they outweigh a countless number of flies.
The blue whales certainly
do not outweigh the flies.
There are at most 25,000 blue whales in the world. With an average weight of say 100,000 kgs (probably high), that's a total mass of 2,500,000,000, 2.5 billion kgs.
Apparently there are about 1.2 x 10
17 flies in the world. Let's take an average weight of 1 mg/fly. That would be 1.2 x10
11 kg of flies in the world, or about 120 billion kg of flies, so about 50 times more mass than there is in blue whales.
The reason to consider biomass the reasonable measure is that it is a good proxy for a species' importance in an ecosystem. With some caveats the proportion of an ecosystem's biomass which is made up of that species could also be considered a good proxy for the proportion of total energy in an ecosystem that is used by that species.
In terms of the number of species and the number of members of species, we are not all that important,
In terms of number of species, sure, we are one out of perhaps tens of millions of species on earth. But that's not particularly interesting is it? In terms of our effect on the biosphere we perhaps have a similar impact to things like ants or flies, which is very considerable indeed.
Moreover, we use 25% of the earth's net primary production, that is, of the energy converted through photosynthesis, 25% is used by humans.
http://www.pnas.org/content/110/25/10324.full
This is an even greater proportion of the total than is suggested by our biomass, which isn't surprising since technology allows us to put the energy we consume to many uses other than growing and moving around bodies.
ETA I feel I was clear but just in case, I'd like to note that this is
only taking the energy of photosynthesis into account,
not fossil fuels. So, agriculture, forestry, etc.
and I do not think that, as Kumar seems to, there is some moral rule in nature that favors herbivores.
Certainly I agree with that.