Something is killing gray whales
404mm 2021-08-17 01:15:20 +0000 UTC [ - ]
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/apr/27/up-to-25...
I get that as a civilization we had to go through some .. let’s call it “growing pains”, before we learned what’s ok and what’s not.
Dumping metal barrels full of chemicals into the oceans while understanding chemistry enough to manufacture DDT is criminal. It should have been criminal back then too. They knew better.
anyfoo 2021-08-17 00:22:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
illumin8 2021-08-17 00:28:51 +0000 UTC [ - ]
anyfoo 2021-08-17 00:34:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
hack-news 2021-08-17 01:41:31 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I'm probably gonna jump on HN when the world is ending and shitpost about how most of you have it coming.
pvaldes 2021-08-17 08:50:42 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Gray whales are not like other whales. They eat the mud in the bottom and filter it eating the invertebrate burrowers. This means that the big trofic chain of marine scavengers in soft bottoms is disturbed in some way (some way that has been undetected still) or that Eastern Pacific whales of this species have a Fukush... ehem, health, quote, quote, problem.
A problem that the Atlantic gray Whales don't have for some reason, it seems.
imacerealkiller 2021-08-17 07:39:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I do freelance work for a reusable takeaway container company where restaurants stock our boxes and customers need only to download an app to get their food in reusable boxes (they can return anywhere). The app is super easy to download but still people are refusing to do it. I tried convincing a pregnant acquaintance to do it, telling her to think of the planet she’s leaving behind for her unborn child, and still she refused. Why? Convenience. So much easier to throw the damn plastic box away and tell yourself “oh it’s made of recycled plastic anyway.”
The fact is, whether it’s recycled plastic or not, plastic is plastic. Driving the demand for recycled plastic boxes isn’t going to fix our planet. Until the government steps in to say every food related shop needs to provide a reusable alternative and customers have to pay more for disposable waste (like how it is now with carrier bags in most supermarkets in Europe), I don’t see much change happening in terms of wildlife. It’s sad but it is what it is.
dkdbejwi383 2021-08-17 07:48:24 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Even if one wanted to recycle all the plastics they use, it's damn near impossible. Firstly, what is and isn't "currently" recycled is not particularly transparent to the end-user. Your local authority (or privatised collection company in the case of businesses) might have a confusing set of rules and guidelines on how to dispose of different types of plastic (which to most regular folk are just "plastic"). Whoever's collected the waste probably doesn't deal with it themselves but sells it on, and then it's a gamble as to whether that 3rd party recycles it, ships it off to a poorer territory, or just burns it.
imacerealkiller 2021-08-17 08:48:23 +0000 UTC [ - ]
niklasd 2021-08-17 07:57:04 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I've been in the exact situation as this woman with a place just around the corner: I just didn't get why I had to download an app in order to get the reusable box for my food from them.
imacerealkiller 2021-08-17 08:50:16 +0000 UTC [ - ]
niklasd 2021-08-17 10:59:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I think for many people the proposition "you need to download this app to do something for which the app is not needed" is a non-starter, also for tech-savvy people.
Another thing to consider is that I (and I guess many other people) are only willing to download an app while having wifi, since my data volumne in LTE is limited.
imacerealkiller 2021-08-17 20:02:46 +0000 UTC [ - ]
niklasd 2021-08-18 10:58:51 +0000 UTC [ - ]
r_singh 2021-08-17 05:19:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
robertwt7 2021-08-17 00:28:12 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I really wish I could help somehow with software..
If only there's something open source like call for code that's being used to help the environment. Would 100% dedicate hours to do that after work
Guest42 2021-08-17 00:47:51 +0000 UTC [ - ]
anyfoo 2021-08-17 00:50:37 +0000 UTC [ - ]
lnwlebjel 2021-08-17 02:27:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
beambot 2021-08-17 03:27:27 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Sounds like there might be a simple way to offset the die-off...
prawn 2021-08-17 04:37:08 +0000 UTC [ - ]
"In some parts of the world, whale products play an important role in the nutritional and cultural life of native peoples. Four IWC member countries conduct aboriginal subistence hunts today: Denmark (Greenland), Russia (Chukotka), St Vincent and the Grenadines (Bequia) and the United States (Alaska and also potentially a resumption of hunts previously undertaken by the Makah Tribe of Washington State)."
Looks like they manage allocations based on whale populations. The gray whale's conservation status is marked as "Least Concern".
The article submitted to HN notes that grey whales are fairly numerous, and I'd say these recent incidents are a canary-in-coal-mine scenario.
batushka3 2021-08-17 13:17:25 +0000 UTC [ - ]
JohnWhigham 2021-08-17 13:27:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
smcl 2021-08-17 13:55:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
aaron695 2021-08-17 08:33:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The article showed a real maturity for the media. It was specific, not whales, grey whales.
If you want to know why they are dying look at the comments.
They don't care. Many can't even be bothered to mention whales. Mostly not one iota of care is given to grey whales.
This is the war to be fought. The environmentalist, they are destroying the plant one species at a time. They won't win, but we will lose much while the environmental machinery ploughs as much as it can into the ground to keep it's control.
egberts 2021-08-17 05:26:37 +0000 UTC [ - ]
torgian 2021-08-17 00:28:21 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I’ve seen how fucked our oceans have become since I was young. More debris in areas I never saw plastics before. Snorkeling is more depressing than ever.
We can potentially turn this around, but the oceans that we knew twenty years ago are long gone.
Act now or life is gonna be that much harder in fifty years.
I’m pretty cynical at this point though. I do what I can, but I think we’ve reached the point of no return
enchiridion 2021-08-17 00:53:43 +0000 UTC [ - ]
TaylorAlexander 2021-08-17 05:28:50 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Edit: Just expanding on glass jars - I started saving all of my glass jars about a year ago. My shelf of jars is overflowing now, and they have many uses. I use peanut butter jars to hold my daily smoothie. I make candles with the jam jars.
We know the plastics industry pushed disposable products hard. And to me it speaks to a broader problem with US business logic - lie cheat and steal at any cost and that is "good" for society. There may be unseemly actions down the waste stream but we are responsible for the culture that produces so much trash.
madacol 2021-08-17 12:05:09 +0000 UTC [ - ]
On the topic of reusing bags, I wish it were as simple as stopping using single-use plastic bags. The most "environmental-friendly" alternative seems to be reusable-bags made of polyester PET(recycled), but you still have to reuse them on average more than ~35 times in order to have less environmental impact. graph: https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/grocery-bag-environmental...
more info: https://ourworldindata.org/faq-on-plastics#are-plastic-alter...
"In fact, studies have shown that when we compare environmental impacts such as greenhouse gas emissions, energy, water and resource use, plastic packaging tends to have a net positive impact. The impact of plastic production and handling is lower than the impacts which would result from food waste without packaging."
formerly_proven 2021-08-17 13:26:32 +0000 UTC [ - ]
wizzwizz4 2021-08-17 13:50:36 +0000 UTC [ - ]
formerly_proven 2021-08-17 14:16:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
On the flip side, most plastic packaging (mainly PE and PP) is non-toxic and biology doesn't really interact with it at all, even if you reduce it to microplastics. Yeah, that stuff is pretty much everywhere - but it's not really doing anything.
autoexec 2021-08-18 02:52:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
We're just starting to understand the harms plastics are causing to our health as we increasingly find plastics in places like our blood, our stool, and in our unborn children. There are already plenty of concerns about plastics resulting in hazardous exposure to endocrine disruptors. It's pervasive across the food chain as well. The idea that "it's not really doing anything" requires a dismal of all the harms we know about already and a remarkable level of optimism about what we will or wont find out in the future.
for more info see:
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/dec/22/micropla...
https://web.uri.edu/gemsnet/files/article_gemsnet.pdf
https://www.endocrine.org/news-and-advocacy/news-room/2020/p...
formerly_proven 2021-08-18 08:02:33 +0000 UTC [ - ]
In fact, the monomers of PE and PP (ethylene and propene) are also not toxic, which is uncommon (compare with e.g. PVC: vinylchloride is toxic in all sorts of ways, polystyrol: styrene is also toxic in a few ways and damages DNA, teflon: it's monomer is also a carcinogen). This is important, because making plastics generally leaves precursors in the finished product: the more the worse the process control is, which costs money and requires know-how.
See e.g. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23862761/ for a study looking at whether these are EDC; they're not: "There were no significant differences between test and control groups in vagina or uterine weight. Data suggest that effluents from plastic food containers do not appear to produce significant adverse effects according to Hershberger and uterotrophic assays."
The single most problematic plastic for health purposes is PVC. PVC in its chemically pure form (difficult to do) isn't bad, either. But pure PVC is a hard, brittle plastic, which is not that useful. So most PVC products consist of a large portion of plasticizer; some products (e.g. cables and other types of very soft PVC) are actually more plasticizer than PVC both by weight and volume. Both PVC and toxic paints are a popular choice for all kinds of toys.
Tagbert 2021-08-18 19:52:44 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Bishizel 2021-08-17 13:46:38 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The underlying argument you were responding to wasn’t really greenhouse gas focused. The discussion was mostly about plastic waste in the oceans and our environment. While it is possible the greenhouse gas budget is better with plastic, this doesn’t address the problem of accumulating forever waste within our environment.
madacol 2021-08-17 14:33:40 +0000 UTC [ - ]
---
The graph I linked to was encompassing a wide variety of environmental impact https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/grocery-bag-environmental...
If you just want greenhouse gas emission, this is the one https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/grocery-bag-comparisons-g... which interestingly show worse impact for single-use plastic bags
imacerealkiller 2021-08-17 07:45:49 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Talanes 2021-08-17 09:01:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I've always run on the gut assumption that they must be putting the worst apples that still look appealing into those packages.
fian 2021-08-17 09:55:43 +0000 UTC [ - ]
herbst 2021-08-17 10:22:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I sometimes collect these codes on my hand and just put all the Vegs in a cloth bag.
imacerealkiller 2021-08-17 12:29:19 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Bishizel 2021-08-17 13:49:25 +0000 UTC [ - ]
imacerealkiller 2021-08-17 09:12:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
torgian 2021-08-19 00:47:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
For me, it’s the packaging. Japan is a great example of this.
Think of a banana, or an orange. Perfect package right? Now wrap them in plastic. Then when you buy them, they’re placed in a plastic bag. Sometimes each individual banana is wrapped individually... with plastic.
That’s Japan. That’s a lot of Asian countries, in fact.
blensor 2021-08-17 10:21:48 +0000 UTC [ - ]
tim333 2021-08-17 09:32:27 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It probably costs them more. Charge less than your costs and you go bust.
imacerealkiller 2021-08-17 12:24:43 +0000 UTC [ - ]
stickfigure 2021-08-17 05:59:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
deadalus 2021-08-17 06:54:29 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Source : https://www.blueridgeoutdoors.com/go-outside/united-states-c...
christophilus 2021-08-17 10:02:16 +0000 UTC [ - ]
My wife and I have tried to minimize waste. We generally buy used, etc. We have also tried to buy mostly non-plastic toys. But man, is it an uphill battle.
People just love to give us random stuff. For example, my dad rants about “Cheap Chinese crap”, but then turns around and buys my kids “Cheap Chinese crap” even after I’ve made it clear that I want less clutter in our lives.
There is a constant pressure on American parents to give their kids toys / experiences / entertainment. It comes from observing the frenetic activity of other parents, from targeted ads, from everywhere. But the fact is, kids just need to have a childhood. They don’t need their days stuffed with scheduled activities, the latest toys, etc. Just idle time, imagination, and quality attention from loving parents (Just a little attention everyday goes a long way.)
/rant
Anyway, advice on how to exit the American way is very much welcome.
shaftway 2021-08-17 17:27:20 +0000 UTC [ - ]
We've made a big deal about giving the kids "experience gifts".
Sometimes it's lessons (my daughter got a week at a horseback riding camp, my son got dirt bike lessons). Sometimes it's a trip (we've taken the kids on 3 separate cross-country road trips with tons of stops at national parks). Sometimes it's a pass to a water park or minigolf place. The kids get involved in the experience they want, so they're emotionally invested and it doesn't feel forced for them. The only rule really is that the thing can't be about electronics (i.e. no going to a video arcade).
Once we established that, we asked that grandparents do the same. Usually this is each set of grandparents taking the kids for a week or more in the summer, but they get creative sometimes.
It's been four years and the kids are much happier with this than the random junk, and have said so.
wizzwizz4 2021-08-17 13:56:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
OrvalWintermute 2021-08-17 14:27:26 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I have a toddler, and she has likely has 50x the number of toys, but 99% of them are recycled gifts that were handed off to us, or obtained through groups like our local BuyNothing, or from neighbors. Her book collection of children's books, and sing-along books is pretty astounding, but we didn't buy a single one.
Much of our toddler clothes, and baby clothes was likewise donated to us from local families that outgrew them, as fast growing children can wear smaller sizes for just a few months. When all of our kids have outgrown them, we plan on sharing them likewise.
SilverRed 2021-08-17 07:01:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Rather than rich countries with citizens living the most resource intensive lifestyles possible judging people in poverty for not having better than first world waste treatment.
crubier 2021-08-17 08:17:35 +0000 UTC [ - ]
yc12340 2021-08-17 06:57:27 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Other countries might not have much better packaging policies, but if you want a war on plastic waste, US and Europe are some of best places to start it.
1: https://www.cnbc.com/2021/01/22/china-failed-to-buy-agreed-a...
NicoJuicy 2021-08-17 10:17:39 +0000 UTC [ - ]
wizzwizz4 2021-08-17 13:56:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
swiley 2021-08-17 10:29:39 +0000 UTC [ - ]
janekm 2021-08-17 14:38:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
cto_of_antifa 2021-08-17 13:27:07 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ornornor 2021-08-17 10:21:43 +0000 UTC [ - ]
dcjdudud 2021-08-17 11:40:30 +0000 UTC [ - ]
TaylorAlexander 2021-08-18 21:35:37 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I do. So do many others. Moreover people want what is pushed on them (aka marketing/public relations works).
> Plastics didn't need to push disposables that hard
Funny because they did push them hard. Tough to say how things would have gone if they hadn’t.
> they were already better.
Better in some ways, worse in others. At first it may have seemed like a good idea, but at this point we need to find ways to reduce plastic use.
admissionsguy 2021-08-17 11:35:42 +0000 UTC [ - ]
weddpros 2021-08-17 01:02:27 +0000 UTC [ - ]
throwawaylinux 2021-08-17 02:14:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
China have since mostly banned that, which sounds like what China needed to do to reign in their incapable plastic recycling industry. So that's fine, but the problem remains that about 80% of ocean plastic waste comes from Asia. Almost 40% from The Philippines alone even when most of the west's waste was going to China. So this can't be handwaved away as being due to "the west", it's a systemic problem in many countries in Asia in particular.
Voloskaya 2021-08-17 07:52:29 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Same story applies to India’s ship dismantling industry, where tons of damaging materials ends up in the ocean. Do we stop sending our ships there ? Of course not, because it doesn’t matter no one will blame Carnival for that.
We are not paying for recycling we are paying for environment damage laundering, so that at home we can display impressive lies such as « 98% of Canadian plastic is recycled » or whatever.
[1]: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada–Philippines_waste_dis...
throwawaylinux 2021-08-17 09:29:29 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Thanks I know, but that's where the vast majority of the west's waste went when we still had big pollution problems with other countries. The solution is for them to control their plastic waste properly and instill their culture with values about litter, with economic incentives and technological help.
Smithalicious 2021-08-17 06:54:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
throwawaylinux 2021-08-17 09:51:19 +0000 UTC [ - ]
We should have regulations on exporting waste, but the west exporting waste is not the cause of the pollution.
ClumsyPilot 2021-08-17 11:12:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada%E2%80%93Philippines_w....
throwawaylinux 2021-08-17 11:59:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Dealing with other people's plastic is easy because there is demand and money in it for you. Dealing with your own isn't quite so interesting that way -- that's what they need to be encouraged to do.
ClumsyPilot 2021-08-17 12:40:46 +0000 UTC [ - ]
https://www.greenpeace.org/philippines/press/2698/greenpeace...
throwawaylinux 2021-08-17 13:04:30 +0000 UTC [ - ]
And I know how things work in The Philippines, I've lived there for some years, I've driven past the the shanty villages built on landfills and the storm drains filled with garbage. I know about the corruption. And I'm not saying there's no single piece of plastic pollute the ocean from Asia that came from western waste exports, so that kind of angle would be a strawman.
I'm questioning the extraordinary apologetics for the worst polluters when it comes to this issue. The evidence doesn't seem to stack up that the majority or even a significant part of the problem is the western waste export trade.
ClumsyPilot 2021-08-17 15:02:35 +0000 UTC [ - ]
As it stands, if countries in Asia act the way we do, they would offload garbage to those even less fortunate. Then we will be pointing fingers at Somalia and wondering how come there is plastic in the ocean still. How come tribal warlords are not dealing with it?
We, the west, have created this problem, and we refuse to address it. Companies that produce 80% of the worlds plastic are headquartered here, listed on our stock exhanges, and financed here. We could resolve this with a stroke of a pen, if we had the balls to take action instead of playing politics
throwawaylinux 2021-08-18 03:08:37 +0000 UTC [ - ]
tjoff 2021-08-17 13:36:29 +0000 UTC [ - ]
throwawaylinux 2021-08-17 13:41:44 +0000 UTC [ - ]
tjoff 2021-08-17 18:07:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
And that can't possible be by exporting our waste and blaming the ones we are exporting to. Yes there are some ridiculously low hanging fruits in some parts of the world, and more effort must be put into that (from our end as well).
But that doesn't excuse us for not taking the, still low hanging fruits, that we have readily control over.
throwawaylinux 2021-08-18 03:25:28 +0000 UTC [ - ]
For many it actually is about defending it, counter to the goal of change.
> And that can't possible be by exporting our waste and blaming the ones we are exporting to.
What's your evidence for that claim?
ClumsyPilot 2021-08-17 11:09:29 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The west is good at many things, but from slave trade to the oil industry, responsibility and respect for locals was never among them.
throwawaylinux 2021-08-17 12:01:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ClumsyPilot 2021-08-17 12:34:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Do you really think these imports are legally clean, they haven't greased a few palms at the customs? You can import anything into Russia if you bribe the right guy.
I bet that if we investigated even just the western side of the trash export industry, we will fund it to be a corupt crine-ridden cesspool
throwawaylinux 2021-08-17 13:12:49 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ClumsyPilot 2021-08-17 13:59:54 +0000 UTC [ - ]
cto_of_antifa 2021-08-17 13:29:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kortilla 2021-08-17 04:10:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Some of the worst offending rivers are in India and the Philippines and “the west” doesn’t send plastic there.
Cut the whataboutism shit and pressure every country directly that is doing this.
Abishek_Muthian 2021-08-18 17:56:59 +0000 UTC [ - ]
"The West has been dumping tens of millions of tons of trash in Southeast Asian countries for more than 25 years - now they want to send it back"[1]
[] https://www.businessinsider.in/science/the-west-has-been-dum...
crubier 2021-08-17 08:14:15 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I agree that the blame is not always 100% on individuals. But systematically blaming anything bad 100% on « governments » is not productive either.
halfdan 2021-08-17 09:20:24 +0000 UTC [ - ]
crubier 2021-08-17 18:53:43 +0000 UTC [ - ]
yhoneycomb 2021-08-17 13:10:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
t0rt01se 2021-08-17 08:07:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
sneak 2021-08-17 11:54:44 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Litter is unsightly but plastic can just be put in a landfill without much harm.
torgian 2021-08-17 01:02:06 +0000 UTC [ - ]
micromacrofoot 2021-08-17 01:04:32 +0000 UTC [ - ]
https://ourworldindata.org/ocean-plastics
At this point we just need to pay them for their trash or something.
prawn 2021-08-17 04:22:22 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Could other countries apply tariff-based pressure based on plastics detection at river mouths, and help with any methods of addressing the problem? There was a comment the other day that plastics in food/bev wrappers was one issue. Surely these are not unsolvable problems with a bit more motivation?
Also wouldn't hurt to publicise the info about ocean plastics coming from their islands (like your comment) and hopefully that encourages change also.
ibeckermayer 2021-08-17 02:50:21 +0000 UTC [ - ]
We certainly shouldn’t let ourselves be held hostage and paying them “protection money”
pxtail 2021-08-17 06:49:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
oefrha 2021-08-17 07:25:41 +0000 UTC [ - ]
SilverRed 2021-08-17 05:57:55 +0000 UTC [ - ]
iamnotwhoiam 2021-08-17 07:55:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Bishizel 2021-08-17 14:02:14 +0000 UTC [ - ]
This example stage is something we often fail at when attempting to export solutions.
micromacrofoot 2021-08-17 16:28:26 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Many developing nations don't worry about climate change because frankly they have a lot of shit going on. Manila has a very low quality of life. Would the US have listened to any outsiders if they started complaining to us about smoke during the industrial revolution, the dust bowl, the depression? No way.
ClumsyPilot 2021-08-17 11:15:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Maybe we should start by dealing with our own criminals that ship garbage around the world illegally?
https://www.ecowatch.com/us-illegal-plastic-waste-2651126176...
bouncycastle 2021-08-17 07:49:26 +0000 UTC [ - ]
2021-08-17 02:59:50 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Peritract 2021-08-17 13:17:26 +0000 UTC [ - ]
rubicon33 2021-08-17 04:06:48 +0000 UTC [ - ]
intended 2021-08-17 07:25:59 +0000 UTC [ - ]
2021-08-17 06:12:33 +0000 UTC [ - ]
micromacrofoot 2021-08-17 16:21:33 +0000 UTC [ - ]
jimmaswell 2021-08-17 02:42:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ClumsyPilot 2021-08-17 11:18:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Do you know we the 'west' are shipping trash to them, illegally? And when its exposed we refuse to take it back?
https://www.ecowatch.com/us-illegal-plastic-waste-2651126176...
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada%E2%80%93Philippines_w...
madacol 2021-08-17 11:40:19 +0000 UTC [ - ]
"ton" 0 hits
"kg" 0 hits
"%" 0 hits
It seems there's no data, I assume they are just "story-telling" a couple of data points
ClumsyPilot 2021-08-17 12:42:49 +0000 UTC [ - ]
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/12/climate/plastics-waste-ex...
madacol 2021-08-17 13:09:55 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I still need more context data to change my mind, but it's a huge improvement over previous links, thanks.
hncurious 2021-08-17 01:05:10 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Scientists are now scrambling to figure out what is killing these 40-foot-long marine mammals. The “what” is anything but obvious.
Some scientists believe there may be too many whales for the population to sustain itself. Others say this explanation of “overcapacity” and “natural causes” overlooks the gantlet of hazards that grays now face — including ecosystem alteration, ship strikes, entanglement in fishing gear, plastics pollution, disease, ocean acidification and loss of kelp forests.
anyfoo 2021-08-17 01:10:42 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I'm always wondering what cause someone who replies with this is trying to advance.
You are probably correct, we don't know what the cause is for this specific problem. We do know that we cause massive, let's say, "alterations" to the oceans by acidification and plastic pollution alone, and there is very strong indication that the effects of those alterations are not positive.
So the worst case when addressing those issues is that we have solved or at the very least ameliorated acidification and plastic pollution, only to find out that gray whales dying specifically was not covered by those causes.
Yes, finding out the actual cause is important (there may be other issues we are not yet aware of), but prioritizing the recovery of the ocean in general is not exactly a waste of effort in the meantime. As an analogy, if a bathroom smells like excrement, fixing the toilets known to overflow is a suitable activity. If it still smells like excrement after, or if you discover a different cause while the toilets are being fixed, you're still glad you fixed those toilets.
yarky 2021-08-17 01:16:24 +0000 UTC [ - ]
There's something called common sense and it's whatever contradicts common sense that deserves a clear explanation/evidence. It's quite obvious that whales shouldn't expect much from the way we treat our oceans.
kortilla 2021-08-17 04:12:59 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Rational thought? The search for truth?
The moment we are happy with “humans lol” as an answer to everything, we’ve given up on science and solutions.
In this scenario, finding the actual cause could actually lead to a specific solution (e.g. banning a particular type of sonar).
betwixthewires 2021-08-17 02:02:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
themaninthedark 2021-08-17 03:46:45 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If you are trying to fix the problem, finding the cause is very important. By just doing something, or worst many somethings, you may make the problem worse and still have no clue of how to fix it.
Now something like this is a little harder because it is not just trying to fix a problem, it is trying to fix a problem with a time limit. Similar to emergency medicine. But harder because the patient is one who's anatomy and physiology you are not familiar with. And they might have reactions to the medicine you are giving them.
The article keeps hinting at lack of food, malnourished, feeding in unusual places. Then goes on to say the last mass die off occurred during colder than usual weather as opposed the recent hotter then usual. It sounds like more data would be very helpful.
Also >Refusal to blame yourself with literally 0 evidence is itself evidence that someone is an oil company shill or something.
Is very hostile and breaks the guideline: >Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith.
techbio 2021-08-17 05:22:57 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If not a shill it sounds like an ask for more resources, to save the gray whales or study the oceans, or something.
Either way, "a precise cause has yet to be determined" seems to be playing a little too close to the vest, and can be true without being especially meaningful.
"Bad ocean management" turns out to be more of a triage problem and less blue-sky research for the sake of knowledge.
betwixthewires 2021-08-17 23:52:22 +0000 UTC [ - ]
musha68k 2021-08-17 03:17:48 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The scientists are working on good solutions but it might be too late, too many ships travel too fast these days[0].
They also mention this in the article:
In a study published this year, a research team found that a variety of whales face risk of ship strikes. That was illustrated in May, when two fin whales came to port in San Diego, plastered to the hull of an Australian warship.
But of all whales in the Pacific, grays are the most likely to be struck by ships, the study concluded. “Risk appeared greatest during south- and northbound migration when much of the gray whale population is moving through waters near shore” — places with “high vessel densities,” the study found.
According to a NOAA database, 205 gray whales were killed by vessels between January 2016 and December 2020 in the eastern Pacific.
[0] https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5zaW1wbGV...
Igelau 2021-08-17 04:51:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
That's the one no one wants to hear. Commercial whaling is practically extinct. Sustainable hunting (like Norway and the Minke) might actually be the solution.
fractallyte 2021-08-17 05:03:36 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Bear in mind that before voracious industrial-scale harvesting, oceans were teeming with life.
This book says it all: https://www.jbmackinnon.com/the-once-and-future-world
pvaldes 2021-08-17 14:14:27 +0000 UTC [ - ]
The more people will overfish, the more gray whales we should have around. And this whales can migrate.
caymanjim 2021-08-17 04:08:18 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It's hard enough to make changes to global human behavior when we have a well-defined problem with a known solution. Guessing at a cause and getting it wrong--or making hand-wavy statements about how the entirely of human behavior is a problem--not only doesn't help anything, it actively hurts efforts to solve problems.
If you present people with evidence and with a pragmatic plan to solve a problem, they're more likely to act. Obviously we get it wrong far more often than we get it right, but there are success stories, like saving many birds from extinction by banning DDT.
If you can't come up with a cause and a solution, you just come off as a crank. If you get the cause wrong or your solution doesn't work, that makes it all the harder to win support for the million other things that need fixing.
betwixthewires 2021-08-17 01:58:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Maybe do the science before we jump to conclusions?
techrat 2021-08-17 03:15:09 +0000 UTC [ - ]
We've been saying this about Global Warming for a while. (An Inconvenient Truth came out in 2006)
By the time people say "we need to do something," sadly, it's already too late.
Humanity's Great Filter is ourselves.
dgb23 2021-08-17 07:32:36 +0000 UTC [ - ]
jl6 2021-08-17 07:44:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
dcjdudud 2021-08-17 11:38:58 +0000 UTC [ - ]
curation 2021-08-17 05:41:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
2021-08-17 04:06:13 +0000 UTC [ - ]
inter_netuser 2021-08-17 07:34:19 +0000 UTC [ - ]