Corals Adapt to Global Warming 87
Chuck1318 writes "Articles in Nature and New Scientist indicate that corals are more adaptable to global warming than previously thought. Large areas of coral reefs had been devastated by bleaching due to the loss of the coral animals' algae partner, which is sensitive to changes in water temperature. Some scientists had projected that coral reefs would all be gone in 20 to 30 years. Now it is found that a more heat-resistant strain of algae is able to colonize the bleached coral, returning them to life."
Once again... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Once again... (Score:5, Insightful)
"Corals are still threatened by factors such as water pollution and damage caused by fishing. But most of these factors are easier to reverse than climate change, Baker points out, especially if conservation efforts are spurred on by the idea that corals are not doomed by global warming.
"We may have more time than we thought to put policies in place," he says. "But this argues for us really getting on top of the factors that we can control."
So, there is still a lot we can do to protect the ones that are surviving, rather than force them to try and adapt to further damage.
Re:Once again... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Once again... (Score:2)
people have this nice thing about having opinions on which way is the best though...
Evolution works (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Evolution works (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Evolution works (Score:5, Interesting)
The key words are "life as we know it"- which doesn't exclude "life as we currently don't know it".
The larger the population, the greater the chance that a suitable phenotype will find a way to survive, just as in the article algae phenotype C dying off gave algae phenotype D a chance to colonize the newfound coral reefs. Phenotype D already existed; probably for many years; but as long as phenotype C survived, it could not take over.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Could you specify what exactly Gould wrote that contradicted Darwin -- and that was new in evolutionary biology?
For instance, I thought a mutation by definition happened in an individual organism in a generation? The rest, as much of it as parses, doesn't se
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
I will troll a bit and say that if the creationist were to
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
(I am asking a bit of a trick question. The way, if any, which Gould's position was different from standard evol biology is diffuse. Gould liked it that way. See e.g. for something Gould didn't want to answer...) [ucla.edu]
Besides that.
How do you explain that evolutionary algorithms work if you don't think evolution works? You have seen articles discussing evolution of e.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
The thing that caught my eye was in a parent post where it seemed to me you were saying the standard theory is in fact discontinuous in the detail, and thus not different than punctuated equilibrium for instance. I think that sort of position cou
Specify the difference! (Score:2)
Again:
If you want to discuss differences between the standard evol biological theory and "punctuated equilibrium" and other of Gould's positions -- please define the differences. Give references that aren't just Gould papers/books (especially since he seems to have varied the exact claims over time).
That was more or less what I wrote. Now I've w
Re:Specify the difference! (Score:2)
What is wrong with the reference to the Euler controversey? On fundamental issues, you have to go to primary sources anyway. And any of your math friends will have a gloss on this. Some assembly required.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
I suffer through allergies and asthma, and as the planet warms up, we'll see bigger spring blooms (in some areas) and greater release of VOC from trees.
That's just going to suck for me and a lot of other people.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Re:Evolution works (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe yes, maybe no. Maybe Species X will disapeer and be replace by Species Y+1. But the problem is, will we know the planet will likely survive a lot of transformations, we may not....
And thoses transformation may spell doom for eco-diversity, but not life itself. You still have 'life' if there only microbes on the surface of the earth.
So, yeah, evolution is cool and all, but it has its limits... (If earth get as hot as Venus, for exe
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
I care about myself.
Don't you care about yourself?
I want a better life for myself. Thus my concern with global warming. I've probably got another good 80 years in my life, possibly 100. If I can minimize 80 years of allergies by acting now, I'd be stupid not to.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Whether you believe that lesson or not shows how much you believe in the theory of evolution. The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few- or does the needs of the one outweigh the needs of the many? Are you a Vulcan or a Randroid?
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
The needs of the many are fine, but it is the needs of the one that I am responsible for. It's not a choice of either or, but it is no one else's responsibility to look after me.
So in my belief system, global warming is a threat to me, and as such it is stupid to ignore it. Just like an imminent oncoming car, or a collapsing building around me, I need to care about the
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Evolution acts on a SPECIES, but it is affected by the mutation and survival of INDIVIDUALS.
that is to say this; the definition of evolution is: achange in distribution of phenotypes (or gennotypes -- depending on when we are talking about) within a species. that is to say, if today we look at the species of feild mice and observe that 1% of them are albino and the reast are normal brown and then we look at the species 15 years from now and find that 10% are now albi
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
I recently saw an article that stated that CO2 levels were higher than they had been in the last 420,000 years. Which implies that they may have been higher than now as recently as 420,000 years ago. Which also implies that most hominid evolution took place in conditions more ex
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Increased rainfall mean increased spring bloom means increased pollen count, so any atmospheric effect that toes the line in amount of rain is better than one that increases the volume of rain.
Likewise increased winds means increased airborne particulates, so any effect that toes the line rather than increase local wind/storm activity...
Increased rainfall also mean increased vegetation, which
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Increased temperatures lead to melting ice-caps, which lead to shutting down Ocean Conveyer, which leads to ice age, which locks up water in glaciers, which leads to more deserts, which leads to LESS things that aggravate your allergies.
That's another climate change scenario, that favours you. We won't know which one you have to endure until it happens. And if it never happens, we won't know whether climate change would have helped you or hurt you.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Smog, via auto pollution. Less auto pollution, less smog, less smog, less asthma. Smog is also correlated to temperature as well!
Temperature, ie the heat island effect, determined by local building codes and policies. Besides being cooler and more comfortable, higher temperatures precipitate more release of VOC
Higher temperature also means increase in cooling load, which translates to increase in local energy usage... Which means more pollution at
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Well, no. As I recall, one of my great-grandfather's had 11 full siblings. It is not terribly common now, but as recently as early this century, it was relatively common in rural areas.
Note that large numbers of full siblings only rarely all reached adulthood - childhood mortality was quite high. But it did happen, now and then.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
1. God, using the process of evolution which he set up himself in the time before the planck constant, follows his own logical rules and ends up creating humanity.
2. Totally by accident some rules were written which had to be followed and ended up creating humanity.
And you blame people who believe in God for being illogical and irrational? Replacing the word "God" with "random accident" doesn't help the matter any- it's equally as illogical and irrational.
Re:Evolution works (Score:3, Informative)
The game of mastermind is a good illustration of why. By random chance, it would take hundreds of moves on average to solve a game. But a good player can find the solution in 10 moves, or even less. That's because he's using a technique other than random chance. He relies on information from the previous moves to construct the next move.
The DNA in your cells did not form randomly with the formation of the specific organism called "you". The
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Re:Evolution works (Score:1)
If you're interested in counter arguments to Intelligent Design, there are many good source
Re:Evolution works (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm sorry, but you have to be truely batshit insane to believe that a personal god, as described by the bible, factually exists. If you use religion as a moral code or whatever, that's fine and even sorta makes sense (it's been tried and tested), but to seriously believe in God is just insane.
Even if we have trouble explaining or just can't explain how life on earth got started, "the magic man made it with magic" simply isn't a better theory.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Is belief in God more irrational than any other belief? It is only that recently science has started stripping away the need to believe in God to explain natural phenomena... but even so, that doesn't mean God doesn't or can't exist, it only means that God is a rational being!
Note, I don't even have an opinion yet on whether he does or doesn't exist.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
But now onto the actual reason for this post...
Why does a person have to be insane to belive in a god? I am truly curious. Until such a time as it can be proven that there is no god, then why should people that belive in a god be classified as insane?
I guess, what i am trying to say is, what is it about a personal god that makes him impossible?
Just curious to here your reason
Re:Evolution works (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact that it can't be disproven doesn't mean much, lots of stuff can't be disproven. You can't prove there aren't pink unicorns, you can't prove this sentence isn't in spanish when nobody's looking, you can't prove that your dog isn't a criminal mastermind. However, if you believed any of these things, you'd be considered insane.
If you believed it because you found some really old book that told you it was true, you'd still be considered insane. The only reason, a
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
That is why it is important to indoctrinate them as soon as possible, and to get those youth to submit to indoctrination on a regular basis. At least once a week on sundays, and preferably everyday; before eating, before going to bed...
You'd be amazed what you can make people believe in if you indoctrinate them well. Godspeed ;
Re:Evolution works (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Evolution works (Score:3, Insightful)
Nobody ever said evolution was NICE.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
A more low-level example would be eyesight. A thousand years ago, nearsightedness was almost unheard of in general populations. They couldn't correct for it, and those who had it weren't good for very much. Ever since glasses w
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Re: Myopia (Score:2)
I think that you may be referring to what is called the "Theory of Accommodation".
A couple of sites with more info: Site 1 [iblindness.org] Site 2 [i-see.org]
(Caveat: These sites are pushing the method, and so are not necessarily objective about it.)
Re:Evolution works (Score:3, Funny)
We get epidemics because trial lawyers sue pharmaceutical companies into bankrupty on one side, and socialist politicians regulate them to death on the other side, so no new medicines are developed.
Our technology fails not because it's inadequate to the task, but because the human species has a Lemming instinct in it and periodically succumbs to an irresistable urge to thr
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Yea, because pharma is, like, so broke.
Re:Evolution works (Score:1, Insightful)
For one, environmental controls haven't prevented the creation of new power plants. Consumers in Michigan said recently they could increase their power output in the state 35% within the environmental regulations, even more if they reinstate several nuclear power plants that were shut down because of operational expenses. That would have been more than enough to prevent the brownouts in my area this year, and would have been even enough even during the much worse summers we'
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Actually, I thought that the private electricity cartels tended to restrict supplies to artificially increase prices. (See California, 2001.) Unreliable power infrastructure is the result of basic stinginess, laziness, and greed (see East Coast blackout, 2003) as well as poor regulation of the electricity market. Power is generated where it's cheapest, not where it is n
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Emphasis added by me.
Speaking for myself, as one who beleives in evolution, I beleive that major climate change can or likely will spell disaster. Certainly not must, though.
And my biggest concern is preventative - if major climate change does cause disaster, then it's likely too late to do anything about it. And then we're fuct.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
There's the old story from America's wild west days about the cowboy who got mad at the local tribe's medicine man. Kidnapped him, took him into town, and hung him by his ankles out of the window of the tallest building in town, and told him "Now, you old Indian, you have a problem". The Medicine Man replied- "No, it is you who has the problem. If you drop me, I die,
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Of course God could've used evolution-- he could've done anything we invent him to have done!
I can't help wonder though, if it's the Chritian omni-God whom you propose could've used evolution to create species. If so, it brings us to the Problem of Evil:
If God is all-knowing and all-powerful, he can create species any damn way he pleases.
If God is benevolent, he would never cause u
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
If God is all-knowing and all-powerful, he can create species any damn way he pleases. If God is benevolent, he would never cause unnecessary harm.
How would one who acknowledges that evolution is not "nice" reconcile this?
I never said that- personally for me God is a mathematical abstract that kicked off the big bang and put some ve
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
The Christian God, some believe, is purely benevolent, all-loving. How could unnecessary harm be justified by such a being?
the problems with evolution for self-centered and selfish individuals would be NECESSARY harm anyway to the greater good of survival of the fitest genome, so your agrument fails on that as well.
No, that's exactly my point: why would an omniscient, omnipotent God use evolution, which necessarily harms certain
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
It can't be- but neither can any given harm to a finite being be unnecessary from the point of view of an infinite being. You don't know the whole plan- assuming that there is one, personaly I think it's a huge experiment and not even God knows how it will turn out in the end- therefore you don't know what harm is necessary and which is not.
No, that's exactly my point: why would an
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
The point is this. Why must God harm something to achieve his goal?
Is it because he wants to? No, he is all-loving. Is it because he has to? No, he is all-knowing and all-powerful. A tri-omni God must achieve its goal without causing harm.
Designatio unius est exclusio alterius.
Re:Evolution works (Score:1, Offtopic)
Why must you burn wood to get lye? It's a part of the process- the process that he set up.
Is it because he wants to? No, he is all-loving.
Of course it is because he wants to, ever hear of touch love where you hurt a kid to get him to stop doing something bad, or for that matter electroshock therapy?
Is it because he has to?
This question is more interesting- he's set up the rules so that he has to, why would you expect him to go outside the rules?
N
Re:Evolution works (Score:3, Insightful)
But to compare humans with God is to compare imperfection with perfection.
Why would God, as a Perfect being, set up such a system wherein harming people is the only way to teach them and make them grow? A Perfect being wouldn't have to do that, and could achieve the exact same thing without doing it.
We really are running in circles
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Have I ever had the ability to control something but chose to let it work itself out? Of course, but I'm not omniscient. An all-knowing God knows what will happen before it happens, so it's not like the story of the apple in the garden of eden would surprise it.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Also, since when did omniscient cover prescient?
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
I don't know, that seems to be what the AC I replied to was saying...
Also, since when did omniscient cover prescient?
Err, omniscience is infinite awareness. The very definition of prescience, in Merriam-Webster, is devine omniscience...
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
I never trusted Webster after I found out that in their first edition they defined a Tory as "A damned fool". However- this leads us back to the definition of scope. Say, for the sake of argument that we have a three-dimensional God much like us. Tri-omni three dimensional God at that. But since he's three dimensional, though his knowledge, power, and benevolence stretch out infinite
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
I really don't have anything more to add. Sorry, but I'm going to bail on this one.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
First, You say you reject god on the baisis of logic, however...
1) Our logic system is either;
a) incomplete -- and thus flawed
b) Self-referential thus self-contradicting and thus flawed (i think this is the upshot of Godel, yes?)
2) You proposition (for the sake of argument) that an all-knowing, all powerfull, all benevolent god might exists *
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Just a thought experiment, drawn on one of my favorite science fiction stories from one of my favorite authors- let's say, for the sake of argument, that time itself is circular; that the begining of our universe, the "teacup of ultimate density" that was before the big bang, is also th
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Because it is all-knowing and all-powerful. Such a being could do literally anything-- even that which to us is impossible or unimaginable.
How do you KNOW what the purpose is- when none of the rest of us do?
Never said I did.
[Chop part about cyclical universe and God possessing only knowledge gained from previous generations... sounds like interesting science fiction but I have no comment.]
Funny though- you reje
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
All knowing/All powerfull within what scope, would be the question?
And if you don't know the purpose, how do you know what scope constitutes "harm" vs "not harm".
Look, personally I have no idea if there's some kind of creator. If there is, and if we ever discover it, it will no doubt be through scientific process, just like everything we currently know about the worl
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
A more legitimate challenge to God using evolution is the writings of the New Testament where Paul makes it pretty clear that death did not exist in the world prior to the Fall of Adam. If there is no death, then natural selection cannot work, and evolution as the origin of species fails
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
But if God is omniscient and omnipotent, all harm (or, Evil) is unnecessary, because the same effect could be acheived through unharmful means.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
You get some destructive interference, and you get some constructive interference. And that's even though you know exactly how it'll turn out.
If you get nothing, then you probably didn't succeed in making something in your image.
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
You are 100% on target. I see some people have already tried to defend their POV in other replies to this, and frankly I'm SO in favor of conservation and wise use of resources, but I cringe every time I see something about how global warming [1] is causing 10,000 species to go extinct every day. Yet somehow the planet and all its inhabitants carry on. Better calm down, because climate shift
Re:Evolution works (Score:3, Interesting)
Where I don't doubt we could cause it singlehandedly- chances are by the time we noticed it we were already too late to do anything about it. And it most certainly is NOT unseen in the history
Re:Evolution works (Score:2)
Chalk up one more (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? (Score:2)
And there's little discussion of the effects of CO2 absorption by the oceans. This will increase the oceans' acidity. Recall that the coral skeleton is mostly calcium carbonate, which is labile to dissolution by acid.
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Re:Chalk up one more (Score:3, Insightful)
I did not read anything by that Lomborg fellow, but I RTFA, and the articles do not say "Rejoice, for Global Warming is a myth!", but rather "Rejoice guardedly, for we may have a bit more time than we feared to rein in Global Warming."
So I wouldn't break out the Champagne yet.
--
Severin's first law: "For every ratio, there is an equal and opposite irratio."
Re:Chalk up one more (Score:2)
Maybe you should. He doesn't say global warming isn't happening, he just says that adapting to it is probably cheaper and more efficient than stopping it.
Re:Chalk up one more (Score:2)
Ranges Change (Score:2)
On Sciscoop earlier (Score:2)
This is very encouraging news - but just because corals will survive doesn't necessarily mean we will...
Oil is still at record high prices [slashdot.org] by the way...
Bit of a no brainer... (Score:1)
It's also worth noting that damage due to pollutants tends to get *under*reported as everyone's so keen to blame global warming. We need to do more to actually reduce the amount of shit we tip into the oceans, rather than bleating about how everyone *else* should stop using their cars.
Re:Bit of a no brainer... (Score:2)
We need to do more to actually reduce the amount of shit we tip into the oceans, rather than bleating about how everyone *else* should stop using their cars.
So the shit we tip into the oceans is bad but the shit we tip into the atmosphere is OK? That's a bit inconsistent.
Re:Bit of a no brainer... (Score:1)
adapt? (Score:3, Insightful)