Warm Water Squid Reported Off Alaskan Coast 44
fenris_23 writes "The associated press is reporting Humboldt Squid - a species that lives in the warm waters off the Baja coast - have recently been observed off the coast of Alaska. 'A large Humboldt squid caught offshore from Sitka is among numerous sightings of a species seen for the first time in waters of the Far North, and the first of the species recovered from British Columbia waters.' This may help corroborate a similar slashdot story covering rising CO2 levels measured at the Mauna Loa Observatory where the possibility was raised that rising sea temperatures are reducing the Earth's ability to manage greenhouse gases."
So, science is liberal? (Score:5, Informative)
Do you think scientists are lying about the oceans warming up? Do you think they're lying about global warming? Do you think that liberals (which I am not one, but I am a scientist) have hijacked science to perpetuate some global warming myth... just for the sake of perpetuating some global warming agenda? Why? Because they like to scare people? Because they want to stifle business? I'll tell you why... it's because that's what they're observing.
I realize there is some debate as to WHY global warming appears to be happening. I don't think there is much legitimate debate on IF it is happening though. The debate, now, seems centered on how severe it is, and how severe the impact will be.
I don't really think the issue of the environment and global warming should be a liberal or conservative issue. It's a rational issue. It doesn't make any sense to politicize it.
Re:So, science is liberal? (Score:2)
It's maddening that some people blindly accept junk science as "neutral scientific observations".
Squid are observed farther north = neutral observation
Squid farther north bacause of CO2 and global warming = junk science
And when exactly is it you thin
Re:So, science is liberal? (Score:2)
No, that's not called "junk science", it's called a hypothesis (and a pretty plausible one). If you have an alternative hypothesis, please advance it. But simply ignoring the observation of species outside their normal range without explanation, that really is "junk science".
Re:So, science is liberal? (Score:2, Insightful)
The point was that one of the three hypotheses about why the CO2 levels recorded in Hawaii was rising sea temperatures. If this hypothesis were true, then there must be some testable predictions. I don't think anybody needs to argue that if sea temperatures rise, then warm-water species can migrate to areas previously too cold to sustain them.
The point is that there is could be an interesting connection. D
Re:So, science is liberal? (Score:1)
Re:So, science is liberal? (Score:2, Insightful)
Some might be twisting and nudging the facts a little but that isn't interesting compared to the simple fact that science do make mistakes from time to time, even big ones [slashdot.org]. Some people seem to think that science is infallible which is simply dangerous and weakens science in the long term. It's pretty obvious that global warming is a hot potato (pun intended) and also that this has compromised the quality of science regarding it (tendency for l
Re:So, science is liberal? (Score:1)
Follow the money (Score:2)
I believe it is the case with global warming. The scientists involved get lots of attention which translates into money and power in our society. There are a lot of valid objections to the global warning theory, but rather than acknowledge and deal with those objections and the opposing data they present, the "scientists" who believe in global warming just ignore them. If the
Re:Revelation (Score:3, Funny)
The men of Rome heeded not these words and boiled the beast in hot oil and leaven flour. They consumed the beast before they supped, dipping the abomination in the fruit of nightshade.
The Lord looked down upon the
Re:Revelation (Score:2)
Re:Revelation (Score:1)
What is wrong? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's still moderately interesting but how come this is considered a bigger science story than this [slashdot.org]?
Is
Re:What is wrong? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, climate "evolves and has cycles". But those "cycles" don't just happen by themselves, they are caused by changes in the environment, atmosphere, radiation, etc. Currently, it evolves in the direction of getting warmer, and that is something that deserves a scientific explanation.
It just happens that CO2 levels are a highly plausible explanation of it. If you have a specific other explanation, please share it with us. Right now, your alternative theory seems to be "shit happens", and that really is junk science.
It's still moderately interesting but how come this is considered a bigger science story than this?
You don't need PCA in order to see trends in that data, you can use your own eyes. On the other hand, even if done correctly, PCA is probably a bogus procedure for this kind of analysis. So, you have a stupid response to a stupid analysis. Frankly, even observing a single warm water squid in cold water tells you more.
Re:What is wrong? (Score:1)
As for PCA's validity etc. you don't seem to be too preoccupied by science being done right, did you read the link and the links in that text or did you just gloss over it?
Obser
Re:What is wrong? (Score:2)
No, you didn't say that, you simply ignored the question of causation at all. We currently have one plausible hypothesis for why global warming is happening. When you come up with an alternative, please share it.
than a major flaw being discovered in some of the most used data in scientifically arguing for global warming
The article about PCA isn't about a flaw in the data, it's about a flaw in one particular statistical analysis.
Re:What is wrong? (Score:1)
I did no such thing, I put forward an important news item that has big implications for most of the theories about what the specific cause(s) is/are. For you to automatically interpret that as a claim that there are no causes at all is ludicrous. The news isn't about what the specific causes are, the news is about a major and often used analysis of data being critically flawed.
The article about PCA isn't about a flaw in the data, it's about a flaw in
Re:What is wrong? (Score:3, Informative)
The paper in question has indeed been cited over 300 times, so it is important, but it contains several results. We don't now which of those results (if any) citing papers rely on and if the conclusions of those papers would be affected if the McIntyre and McKitrick criticism is accurate. Muller fails to make that analysis in his paper, and
Re:What is wrong? (Score:3, Informative)
Here's another plausible expanation, from the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine [oism.org]. The gist is that long term measurements of solar activity (going back thousands of years) show that the sun's output varies in cycles, and that those cycles coorelate very closely with average temperature measurements over the same period.
This seems much more plausible to me, since it explains global warming and cooling that we know occurred well before the industrial revolution.
Re:What is wrong? (Score:3, Informative)
And, yes, solar variation has an influence on temperatures, and climatologists are aware of it. See Solar variation accounts for less than half of global warming in 20th Century, UA geoscientist finds [stanford.edu], for example. And here [nasa.gov].
Re:What is wrong? (Score:1)
maybe it mutated (Score:2)
Seen similar thing (Score:5, Interesting)
The sea there has been warming these last years. I'd say on average it went up 2 C in temperature, but that's a totally unscientific estimate of mine.
Re:Seen similar thing (Score:3, Informative)
Article is example of common carelessness (Score:2, Flamebait)
species range is important (Score:3, Informative)
One of the key determinants of the range of a species is temperature. So, observing changes in the range of species is one way in which one can determine whether there have been long-term changes in temperature.
"The jump in CO2 may be real but the presumed jump in temps may be more illusory than previously supposed"
Or it may not be, we just don't know. The way to gain more certainty is to get more data from different sources than w
Because we all know... (Score:3, Insightful)
I read squirts...not squid (Score:1)
Re:I'm surprised this didn't appear in politics (Score:1)
The squid migrated there too feed on penguins (Score:3, Funny)
Audubon Society [cvco.org]
Just a normal El Nino year (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just a normal El Nino year (Score:1)
Re:Just a normal El Nino year (Score:2)