Message from @Toshi

Discord ID: 576236049697603584


2019-05-10 02:33:40 UTC  

Yeah

2019-05-10 02:34:00 UTC  

U sure if plants have a better environment their wouldn’t be more plants ?

2019-05-10 02:34:02 UTC  

Plants thrive in higher CO2

2019-05-10 02:34:19 UTC  

No it’s not

2019-05-10 02:34:21 UTC  

Yummy

2019-05-10 02:34:29 UTC  

IT'S NOT DYING 😡

2019-05-10 02:34:32 UTC  

Quit fear mongering 🙄

2019-05-10 02:34:35 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/576235611166343212/Capture-decran-2017-10-28-a-15.09.05-1024x601.png

2019-05-10 02:34:38 UTC  

Sounds ridiculous somebody ur telling me if plants have a better environment their wouldn’t be more plants

2019-05-10 02:35:02 UTC  

@jeremy in New Zealand they have been cutting plants for many many years (since first settlers)....and now like "Ooopsy! We need more plants!"

2019-05-10 02:35:04 UTC  

😄

2019-05-10 02:35:11 UTC  

Coco is smart. He gets it.

2019-05-10 02:35:11 UTC  

@Toshi If more people invest in those kind of things and vote for these 'green' initiatives, that could change.

2019-05-10 02:35:19 UTC  

CO2 is not, and has never been, a poison. Each of our exhalations, each of our breaths, emits an astronomical quantity of CO2proportionate to that in the atmosphere (some >40,000 ppm); and it is very clear that the air we expire does not kill anyone standing in front of us. What must be understood, besides, is that CO2 is the elementary food of plants. Without CO2 there would be no plants, and without plants there would be no oxygen and therefore no humans. The equation is as simple as that.

2019-05-10 02:35:48 UTC  

Not relevant to the global warming issue tho

2019-05-10 02:35:54 UTC  

Plants need CO2, water, and daylight. These are the mechanisms of photosynthesis, to generate the sugars that will provide them with staple food and building blocks. That fundamental fact of botany is one of the primary reasons why anyone who is sincerely committed to the preservation of the “natural world” should abstain from demonizing CO2. Over the last 30 years, there has been a gradual increase in the CO2 level. But what is also observed is that despite deforestation, the planet’s vegetation has grown by about 20%. This expansion of vegetation on the planet, nature lovers largely owe it to the increase in the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere.

2019-05-10 02:35:58 UTC  

Greenhouse effect

2019-05-10 02:36:03 UTC  

We should put more co2 in the air for more plants

2019-05-10 02:36:17 UTC  

Thatsgay

2019-05-10 02:36:18 UTC  

Lol

2019-05-10 02:36:20 UTC  

@AstralSentient what do you mean by invest? So are you suggesting for me to go into debt and borrow money form a bank to install bloody solar panels or buy an electric car?

2019-05-10 02:36:25 UTC  

Climate change is real but humans aren’t doing it

2019-05-10 02:36:25 UTC  

Plants need CO2, water, and daylight. These are the mechanisms of photosynthesis, to generate the sugars that will provide them with staple food and building blocks. That fundamental fact of botany is one of the primary reasons why anyone who is sincerely committed to the preservation of the “natural world” should abstain from demonizing CO2. Over the last 30 years, there has been a gradual increase in the CO2 level. But what is also observed is that despite deforestation, the planet’s vegetation has grown by about 20%. This expansion of vegetation on the planet, nature lovers largely owe it to the increase in the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere.

2019-05-10 02:36:28 UTC  

Plants need CO2, water, and daylight. These are the mechanisms of photosynthesis, to generate the sugars that will provide them with staple food and building blocks. That fundamental fact of botany is one of the primary reasons why anyone who is sincerely committed to the preservation of the “natural world” should abstain from demonizing CO2. Over the last 30 years, there has been a gradual increase in the CO2 level. But what is also observed is that despite deforestation, the planet’s vegetation has grown by about 20%. This expansion of vegetation on the planet, nature lovers largely owe it to the increase in the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere.

2019-05-10 02:36:30 UTC  

Plants need CO2, water, and daylight. These are the mechanisms of photosynthesis, to generate the sugars that will provide them with staple food and building blocks. That fundamental fact of botany is one of the primary reasons why anyone who is sincerely committed to the preservation of the “natural world” should abstain from demonizing CO2. Over the last 30 years, there has been a gradual increase in the CO2 level. But what is also observed is that despite deforestation, the planet’s vegetation has grown by about 20%. This expansion of vegetation on the planet, nature lovers largely owe it to the increase in the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere.

2019-05-10 02:36:33 UTC  

Plants need CO2, water, and daylight. These are the mechanisms of photosynthesis, to generate the sugars that will provide them with staple food and building blocks. That fundamental fact of botany is one of the primary reasons why anyone who is sincerely committed to the preservation of the “natural world” should abstain from demonizing CO2. Over the last 30 years, there has been a gradual increase in the CO2 level. But what is also observed is that despite deforestation, the planet’s vegetation has grown by about 20%. This expansion of vegetation on the planet, nature lovers largely owe it to the increase in the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere.

2019-05-10 02:36:36 UTC  

Tell em citizen

2019-05-10 02:36:41 UTC  

Oh boy, citizen is breaking his own rules again!

2019-05-10 02:36:41 UTC  

!mute @Citizen Z spamming

2019-05-10 02:36:42 UTC  

<:XMARK6:403540169992568833> You can't mute a moderator.

2019-05-10 02:36:51 UTC  

If we study, however, what has been happening at the geological level for several million years, we realize that the present period is characterized by an extraordinarily low CO2 level. During the Jurassic, Triassic, and so on, the CO2 level rose to values sometimes of the order of 7000, 8000, 9000 ppm, which considerably exceeds the paltry 400 ppm that we have today. Not only did life exist, in those far-off times when CO2 was so present in large concentration in the atmosphere, but plants such as ferns commonly attained heights of 25 meters. Reciprocally, far from benefiting the current vegetation, the reduction of the presence of CO2 in the atmosphere would be likely to compromise the health, and even the survival, of numerous plants. To fall below the threshold of 280 or 240 ppm would plainly lead to the extinction of a large variety of our vegetal species.

2019-05-10 02:36:55 UTC  

If we study, however, what has been happening at the geological level for several million years, we realize that the present period is characterized by an extraordinarily low CO2 level. During the Jurassic, Triassic, and so on, the CO2 level rose to values sometimes of the order of 7000, 8000, 9000 ppm, which considerably exceeds the paltry 400 ppm that we have today. Not only did life exist, in those far-off times when CO2 was so present in large concentration in the atmosphere, but plants such as ferns commonly attained heights of 25 meters. Reciprocally, far from benefiting the current vegetation, the reduction of the presence of CO2 in the atmosphere would be likely to compromise the health, and even the survival, of numerous plants. To fall below the threshold of 280 or 240 ppm would plainly lead to the extinction of a large variety of our vegetal species.

2019-05-10 02:36:58 UTC  

If we study, however, what has been happening at the geological level for several million years, we realize that the present period is characterized by an extraordinarily low CO2 level. During the Jurassic, Triassic, and so on, the CO2 level rose to values sometimes of the order of 7000, 8000, 9000 ppm, which considerably exceeds the paltry 400 ppm that we have today. Not only did life exist, in those far-off times when CO2 was so present in large concentration in the atmosphere, but plants such as ferns commonly attained heights of 25 meters. Reciprocally, far from benefiting the current vegetation, the reduction of the presence of CO2 in the atmosphere would be likely to compromise the health, and even the survival, of numerous plants. To fall below the threshold of 280 or 240 ppm would plainly lead to the extinction of a large variety of our vegetal species.

2019-05-10 02:37:01 UTC  

😮

2019-05-10 02:37:14 UTC  

In addition, our relentless crusade to reduce CO2 could be more harmful to nature as plants are not the only organisms to base their nutrition on CO2. Phytoplankton species also feed on CO2, using carbon from CO2 as a building unit and releasing oxygen. By the way, it is worth remembering that ~70% of the oxygen present today in the atmosphere comes from phytoplankton, not trees: contrary to common belief, it is not the forests, but the oceans, that constitute the “lungs” of the earth.

2019-05-10 02:37:15 UTC  

@Toshi Not you specifically, just general people, and prices could go down.

2019-05-10 02:37:17 UTC  

In addition, our relentless crusade to reduce CO2 could be more harmful to nature as plants are not the only organisms to base their nutrition on CO2. Phytoplankton species also feed on CO2, using carbon from CO2 as a building unit and releasing oxygen. By the way, it is worth remembering that ~70% of the oxygen present today in the atmosphere comes from phytoplankton, not trees: contrary to common belief, it is not the forests, but the oceans, that constitute the “lungs” of the earth.

2019-05-10 02:37:21 UTC  

<:nasalies:485141702403686403>

2019-05-10 02:37:27 UTC  
2019-05-10 02:37:30 UTC  

Or ban

2019-05-10 02:37:32 UTC  

Because co2 was the inly different thing then