elephantnose3334
Fishaholic
The thing about our oceans and freshwater waterbodies is that they need serious help.
Yes, I do agree with you. Are freshwater environments enduring the same thing as coral reefs?Climate scientists were originally saying the CO2 levels would increase slowly but they haven't. The CO2 levels have jumped rapidly in 2018 and this changes things considerably. Initially people were saying we need to reduce greenhouse gasses to 50% of currently levels by 2050. Now it's we must reduce them by 50% by 2030.
The polar ice caps were meant to be stable for a long time but scientists are now concerned they are melting a lot faster than predicted. And this is going to get worse. If you have 2 ice cubes in a glass of water and put it on a table in the sun, the ice cubes hold the temperature for a while until they start to melt. The more they melt, the less ice remains to keep the water cool. Eventually it gets to a point where the remaining ice melts rapidly and the glass of water starts to warm up really quickly. We are at that point right now on this planet. The ice cubes represent the polar ice caps. The glass of water represent the ocean. The ice caps are starting to melt faster now than expected and that is due to a warmer atmosphere and ocean.
I have never seen the pH of the ocean drop in 40 years of testing it and the drop occurred in 2017. Even though it's only a drop from 8.5 to 8.4, it's still a drop and that was unheard of. In 2018 the CO2 levels increased significantly. In 2018-2020 and 2023-2024 there have been huge wildfires all around the world that have released even more CO2 and destroyed millions of hectares of trees.
I agree that forests do take up CO2, but the problem is the lack of trees and forests. In the last 200 years the human race has cleared 90% of trees and forests around the world. We need to replant the planet now because the remaining trees/ forests are unable to help the phytoplankton take up the CO2 that is being produced.