Well, MSH, while I feel sometimes like I might be annoying as hell given that I agree with the actual movements to reduce water wastage, kill off coal, rework things away from monocultures, slow down on the trend towards paving all the things, all that jazz, but then I point out that more CO2 is a good thing for life in general since plants are more or less built with shit pulled out of the air, plus it couldn't actually drive the climate system through some magical positive feedback loop (seriously, long term stability+high gain positive feedback?), and even if it did, warmer climates are not the arid deathworlds which they are often said to be, but I wasn't wanting or intending to be dismissive, just curious, I've came across all sorts of positions on the environment, but that kind of cynicism is rare so I don't know where to place it really.
Myself, I've got apocalyptic malaise, listening to various doom and gloom scenarios since the late 80's I could just as easily say it is a damn near normal human response to look at something and immediately jump to the worst possible outcome and begin trying to convince others about the impending end of the world.
When you're living in a grassland and see smoke, or hearing the rumbles of an incoming flood, detecting an ambush before the lions actually get the chance to spring it, these would be incredibly valuable times to say "OH SHIT GUYS WE ARE ALL FUCKED, LISTEN TO ME!" but nowadays these instincts aren't tuned to the right scale. We can't hear 10+ km meteors, identify the launches of icbm strikes, or look at the ground and know a magnitude 8.5 quake is about to strike. We are aware of them though, and our danger scanners are still active, so it's almost comforting to find a new apocalypse it seems?
Obituary: Great Barrier Reef (25 Million BC-2016)
Great Barrier Reef Obituary Goes Viral, To The Horror Of Scientists
Ocean Acidification, Ocean Heating, and Coral Bleaching isn't really news for most people up on Climate Change. Still, the GBR suffered a major blow after a bleaching event recently, and it's worrying that there might be more to come.
There's a rich ecosystem and important feeding and breeding ground created by the GBR, and there's apparently 70,000 or so jobs dependent on it. Whether your concerns are ecological or economic, the fact that we've now lost 20%+ of the reef is really bad news.
Antropocene Mass Extinction Event, ho? I hope not.
Ah, here's a more scientific source than huffpo:
http://www.coralcoe.org.au/media-releases/coral-bleaching-taskforce-documents-most-severe-bleaching-on-record I mean, it's more scientific than most available sources, so it's pretty easy to beat out huffpo there.
It also has around 130,000 km2 of land devoted to a specific type of crop.
See if you can guess which one, corn maybe, wheat, ooh, tobacco might be it!
Got your guess in mind?
It's grass, our lawns, bluegrasses, zoysias, bentgrass, bermuda, st. augustine, they're all present in various amounts, given water, fertilizer, regular mowing, manual weeding, pesticide, and of course... donations from dogs.
Indeed, they're actually helpful in reducing the urban heat island effect, and draw down a good amount of carbon dioxide, anywhere from 12~35 Gigatonnes of CO2 per year conservatively and wipe out the 1 or 2 Gigatonnes of CO2 we exhale along with most or all the ~33+ Gigatonnes of CO2 we emit. They also take a fuckton of water, lots of which winds up as runoff.
Objection! Not a crop.
Ok fine, though it is a cultivated plant, but it is only harvested for social acceptance, rather than actual use of the material.