Scientists have discovered that rising ocean
temperatures slow the development of baby fish around the equator, raising concerns about the impact of global warming on fish and fisheries in the tropics.
Not exact matches
Subscribe to the Afternoon Brief Trending Story: Cooling
temperatures slow crop
development and lengthen bloom for Napa Valley grower «In mid-April, vine
development was maybe one to two weeks ahead of last year, which was anywhere from two to three weeks ahead of normal,» Domenick Bianco says.
«We found that where ocean
temperatures warmed beyond a certain point as we neared the equator, at about 29 degrees, the pace of larval
development slowed,» says study lead author, Dr Ian McLeod.
A new study confirms that carbon pollution has ended the era of the stable climate conditions that enabled the
development of modern civilization High levels of carbon pollution have caused global
temperatures to rise above the
slow - changing, relatively stable conditions that existed «when humans were figuring out where the climate — and rivers and sea levels — were most suited for living and farming.»