Kirata
Posts: 15477
Joined: 2/11/2006 From: USA Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: leonine Seems you didn't bother reading the article, since the main concern was about coral. Or did you skip that because you didn't have a talking point ready for it? I read the article. But threats to phytoplankton populations are by far the most serious concern, so I focused on that. However, since you apparently have no response and want to change the subject, alright... Protecting the health of coral reef ecosystems This page from the World Resources Institute section on "Reefs at Risk" details the major problems currently faced by the world's coral reefs... Some of the actions that can best protect reefs are not directly linked to conservation. They range from building sewage and industrial waste treatment facilities to minimize pollution of coastal habitats to removing the host of subsidies and incentives – in the agricultural, forestry, development, fisheries, and other economic sectors – that result in degradation of water quality, direct destruction of reef habitats, and overexploitation of reef species. You working on that? Or are you just interested in whining about CO2 and calling people names? Well nevermind, since there's nothing there about warming, let's move on... Some Corals Like It Hot A team of international scientists working in the central Pacific has discovered that coral which has survived heat stress in the past is more likely to survive it in the future... "Until recently, it was widely assumed that coral would bleach and die off worldwide as the oceans warm due to climate change," says lead author Jessica Carilli, a post-doctoral fellow in Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation's (ANSTO) Institute for Environmental Research. Looks like some corals can adapt. Say it ain't so, Joe! Healthy Coral Reefs Of Madagascar Resisting Damage Healthy coral reefs of Madagascar's northeast coast have so far resisted the damaging effects of warmer ocean temperatures attributed to global climate change, say scientists who recently studied the region... These findings, combined with results of a similar survey in 2002 along northwest Madagascar's coast, increased to 829 the total number of fish species in Malagasy waters. The two Rapid Assessment Program (RAP) expeditions also recorded the highest coral diversity of the western Indian Ocean and the Red Sea, making the region one of the richest in Indian Ocean marine biodiversity. Now look, I've learned not to expect a balanced view from the faithful who believe Salvation cometh only by the Holy Consensus. But you could at least try to pretend that you're not a religious cult. You know, for appearance sake? K.
< Message edited by Kirata -- 10/3/2013 6:23:50 PM >
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