Mood: irritated
As hurricanes pass over the ocean, the wind carries warmer surface water away, allowing colder water from the bottom to rise, bringing with it quantities of nutrients. Satellite images actually show a trail of cold water in the path of storms. Tiny marine plants, called phytoplankton, fertilized by the nutrients, multiply rapidly in this wake. As the plants die, they sink to the seafloor. The data revealed that the larger the hurricane, the larger and longer-lasting the plankton bloom. This poses tantalizing questions about the role that hurricanes might play in removing carbon from the atmosphere. Like all green plants, phytoplankton consumes carbon dioxide, a major greenhouse gas whose rise in the atmosphere is blamed for climate change. As the plants die, they sink and carry the carbon they store to the seafloor.
So Bush won't sign the Kyoto Protocol seeking to reduce greenhouse emissions because he doesn't want to lose American jobs. So how much are these jobs worth, Bush, in lost lives and devastation to the planet?
Posted by maryinjapan
at 2:11 PM