Message from @The_chickenmaster
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**Question of The Day #190**
What do you think would happen to the forests if the carbon dioxide (CO2) levels were reduced from .04% to .03%?
Tell us what you think in the <#484514023698726912> 😃
I doubt it CO2 levels will get reduced though, it's way more likely that they'll rise
the short answer is The World system would correct / balance itself as it always does
It probably would have a negligable effect on land plants and would be slightly advantageous to almost all sea life because the oceans would become slightly less acidic. But only then if it continued to drop
How did they measure c02 levels in the year 1000
predicted measurement
za warudo funny joke
So basically guess work
Weird that the moment we actually started measuring the chart went up
🤔 🤔 🤔 🤔
nobody cares about 1000, just look at the past century
They use pillars of ice they cut out from the north or south pole in short and find the carbon levels for that time based on how far down the ice they go
oh smart
Im gonna call bs on that chart chief
Ok but do it as you like good luck denying ocean acidification
they made it up
like they do with just about everything
Just that that chart is
.03% would be the ideal, we're at .04% only because we don't have enough trees
Im sure its just mind control technology
The earth is flat. Noobs,
And even if global warming is bs we still need to stop poluting so much
@.-. You sound more like a troll than a flat earther to me.
Why do they always make it so obvious
Like how the shellfish are grown in eastern Wa pools because the acids kills their earlier stages. Corals are adapting to the acidic nature by building without their protective coating but then get desteoyed by cyclones. The marine economy is starting to fail in several places because of this
sure but pollution is literally the reason for an increase of CO2 levels?
And the prediction is within the next century we lose 1/3 of all species of sea life
sounds fun
can't wait
yea
at least itll leave more space for our ocean cities
:/
The main problem is 100 years is just not enough time to adapt. But hey jellyfish and seagrass will benefit
Lol
everything's connected so when one species starts to die off then the others will follow, chain reaction
nit nesserily always the truth but okay
if you change just one part of a food chain it leaves a significant impact on all the other creatures