• Itsyaboimuf
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    1 year ago

    Global warming is the major factor, said Piers Forster, professor of climate physics at the University of Leeds, but El Nino, the decline in Saharan dust blowing over the ocean and the use of low-sulphur shipping fuels were also to blame. “So in all, oceans are being hit by a quadruple whammy,” he said. “It’s a sign of things to come.” Thousands of dead fish have been washing up on Texan beaches and heat-induced algal blooms have also been blamed for killing sea lions and dolphins in California.

    Yeah we are so fucked, I don’t trust corporations to make any meaningful changes.

    • entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      And that’s not even mentioning how most of the plankton in the Atlantic have died due to ocean acidification.

      We’re well past the point of no return and into the era of the anthropogenic mass extinction event.

      Articles like this are narrative-control propaganda to keep the poors from killing the wealthy before they can get into their bunkers.

      • zephyreks@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Given how successful humans have been with selective breeding, how has no one designed a plankton that is more tolerant of water acidity?

    • qprimed
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      1 year ago

      of course they wont as long as no change maintains the status quo on the next fiscal report.

      change will only happen when we make it financially painful to not change. that requires global collective action by an informed and motivated world citizenry - and this is why I am depressed.