The Guardian claims ocean warming is causing a staggering collapse in marine life, but the study it cites actually shows the opposite.
When a year is warmer, fish biomass is found to increase by as much as 24%. When years turn colder, biomass falls by around 15%.
That is the observed data.
To preserve the climate narrative, however, the authors then abandon real year-to-year results and switch to a modeled decadal trend.
The model assigns warming a negative effect and reports a decline. That decline is not observed, it is modeled.
The authors go on to admit they cannot separate temperature effects from overfishing, which is the primary, well-known driver of fish declines worldwide.
Since fishing pressure is not included, the model loads losses onto temperature by default. Even though, as per the study's own data, warmer years mean more fish.
The collapse exists only in the model.
@stevesnewday@JunkScience That there isn't a direct causal relationship between CO2 and global warming, that should have already been established long ago. We already had all the evidence we needed to safely conclude that.
@XFreeze Recognizing the amount of energy in the sun is one thing. Extracting it and converting it into electricity is another completely different thing.
@dr_jon_l@JamieAA_Again The inventor of the PCR test said "PCR should not be used for medical diagnostics due to its potential for false positives."
Hope that helped.
@ClimateRealists Also... A study by the European Forest Fire Information System found that 97% of fires in Europe were started by humans, with arson being the leading cause.
@MatthewWielicki@BasedMikeLee Even despite a study by the European Forest Fire Information System finding that 97% of fires in Europe were started by humans, with arson being the leading cause.