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In sci.space.policy Rand Simberg wrote:
On 16 Mar 2006 08:50:26 -0800, in a place far, far away, "bill" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: "George" wrote in message He also assumes that the environment in which we all live could sustain such levels. I don't think there is any precedent for that assumption. I don't think plants will complain. How do you know? The planet has never sustained those levels. 800 ppm? 800 ppm will easily desertify the planet and melt all the ice. increased temperature accelerates the evaporation precipitation cycle, really, you are looking at more tropical type climates and less desert. Not to mention the fact that it would probably accelerate plant growth rates (and in fact such acceleration would prevent the levels from ever getting that high). I remember reading a study somewhere that plant growth doesn't accelerate that much with increasing CO2 concentration. It is a factor that can slow down global warming slightly, but not much. I don't have references. Also, 1-3.5 degrees C is equal to 150 to 550 kilometers of distance towards the equator - trees can have trouble adjusting and might get massive disease outbreaks. This has happened somewhat in northern areas when some parasites' larvae don't die anymore since the winters tend to be warmer than before. Actually, I've read that human activity is causing the sixth mass extinction as we speak. |
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