The Mysterious Blob
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Poem: "A Strong Set of Collective Values"
This poem is spillover from the April 6, 2021 Poetry Fishbowl. It was inspired and sponsored by librarygeek. It also fills the "Social…
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New verses in "Becomes the Saving Grace"
Thanks to donations from librarygeek and fuzzyred, there are new verses in " Becomes the Saving Grace." Cas flibbers over Il…
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Birdfeeding
Today is cloudy and mild with a nice breeze, so I can work during the day. :D Last night it rained off and on for several hours, which is a big help.…
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Poem: "A Strong Set of Collective Values"
This poem is spillover from the April 6, 2021 Poetry Fishbowl. It was inspired and sponsored by librarygeek. It also fills the "Social…
-
New verses in "Becomes the Saving Grace"
Thanks to donations from librarygeek and fuzzyred, there are new verses in " Becomes the Saving Grace." Cas flibbers over Il…
-
Birdfeeding
Today is cloudy and mild with a nice breeze, so I can work during the day. :D Last night it rained off and on for several hours, which is a big help.…
O_O
July 17 2009, 23:54:29 UTC 11 years ago
I have seen algae mats surface in ponds, and it's bad enough. If that happens to the ocean, much doom awaits.
This is disturbingly plausible as an explanation. It accounts for the fact that the phenomenon was unfamiliar. And it would be a lot worse than, say, bacteria that eat plastic or oil and leave gunk behind.
Re: O_O
July 18 2009, 00:08:49 UTC 11 years ago
Basically, if the water temperature is rising at deep levels, then there's a risk these could spontaneously decompose and release vast amounts of methane...which is a very strong greenhouse gas [not to mention explosive in air].
Although, if it's a result of something else changing in the environment, it's still bad, since much of the bottom ecosystem is dependent on these bacterial mats. [it would be like all the grass dying off on the African Savannah.]
Re: O_O
July 18 2009, 02:50:41 UTC 11 years ago
>>Although, if it's a result of something else changing in the environment, it's still bad, since much of the bottom ecosystem is dependent on these bacterial mats.<<
Yeah ... we better hope that global warming is caused by human activities, because then it is at least theoretically within our power to affect the process. If it's caused by something else, we probably can't influence, and if we can't adapt, we're just doomed. That would suck.
>> [it would be like all the grass dying off on the African Savannah.]<<
Or your lungs falling out when you cough. Some people forget how much of Earth's oxygen comes from the oceans (i.e. from algae and such). Any large-scale changes in an ecosystem generally mean that something is severely out of balance. Vast algae blooms and collapses worry me. Dying coral reefs worry me. A whole new flavor of doom is not what I need.