I don't know if live has ever existed on Venus. But I do know that no life or at least 99.99% of life on earth would die within seconds if put on Venus.
Hell, you got me there big guy. Wow, game, set and match!
Is this like one of those candid camera things? Are you serious? What does this statement say about anything?
Salmonella bacteria reproduce through binary fission once every 20 minutes. The maths isn't difficult.
Copout. Do you have any reason to believe that temperatures won't continue to increase at that same predicted rate? Any reason at all?
Geeze. You have a point. Guess the Earth will be hotter than the sun in a few million years. Then what? Maybe hotter than the big bang after that! Where will it stop???
Demonstrate where temperatures will fall into equilibrium then, Dustin.
The study shows how bad of an effect extinction has on ecosystems. Your earlier claims were that most extinctions would have little or no effect on them.
I said most mammalian. Sure, wipe out a few dozen key bacteria or a few types of plant from any ecosystem and watch it crumble. Wipe out all humpbacks...then what? Can't use that same argument any more. Guess that means we can wipe out humpbacks and it won't matter.
I know what it means. So what if I'm arguing from ignorance?
Oh, I seriously have to add this to my sig! Classic!
Yes. Around 99% of the species that exist today did not exist then.
You said...
*sigh* Yes. Permian extinction -- big and bad. 99%. Gone. Global biodiversity today - all of it - is here in spite of that event. We arose from that 1%. So, even though most species were wiped out over relatively short period of time, all of life we have today persevered.
Your argument was that even if we killed off most mammal species then the effect would be negligible (point I refuted)
Then you argued that the "large shifts" in the ecosystem would "balance out" in due time. I pointed out that it would in the shortest time scales take tens of thousands of years thus making the point irrelevant for human concerns.
For modern human concerns, true. Humans might evolve into something else over 10 million years. So? The article said nothing about humans being wiped out by reduced biodiversity.
Who ever mentioned Panda's? I didn't. Looks like you're the one inventing straw men here not me.
Not at all. The 'humans will suffer if biodiversity reduction makes ecosystems collapse' argument might work for some species, but not all. Why not wipe out pandas? I'm saying the rationality doesn't hold in many situations. If all oceanic algae disappeared tomorrow, we'd suffer big time. No arguments there. But it doesn't translate to humpbacks.
Key creatures in an ecosystem are clearly more important from an ecological standpoint. However ecological arguments aren't the only arguments against extinction.
Wonderful. Got another argument then, that's rational?
Mine is both aesthetic, emotional as well as rational. You're simply not smart enough to see that there are many rational and pragmatic reasons to prevent extinction.
You're either being intentionally obtuse - again - or just feel like arguing for the sake of it. If the latter, you're wasting time and making yourself look rather immature.
I'm saying that in many cases the 'ecosystem collapse' argument doesn't hold true. WWF uses the panda as its symbol, for instance; why? It's an emotional tug. People don't want pandas to disappear. But humans wouldn't be affected in any appreciable way if they all disappeared tomorrow.
If E.coli went extinct tomorrow, we'd be in real trouble, sure.
Athon