James Cook University (JCU), based next to Australia’s Great Barrier Reef has been at the forefront of claims that extra CO2 is dangerous to coral reef fish. CO2 supposedly changes fish behavior including making them
- lose their ability to smell predators and become attracted towards the scent of predators,
- become hyperactive,
- lose their tendency to automatically swim either left or right, and
- have impaired vision.
But a group of determined and principled scientists – I call them the Magnificent 7 – have doggedly questioned, and investigated these claims.
The remarkable article appearing in Science magazine on 6 May 2021 documents the many twists and turns in this story. Are the remarkable results on fish behavior fraudulent?
Is there a cover-up of fraud by universities and funding agencies? And why do senior scientists attack the Magnificent 7 just for wanting to check previous work?
The Magnificent 7 is led by Tim Clark and Fredrik Jutfelt along with five other international scientists. They are risking their careers blowing the whistle on a very powerful organization in the marine biology community – JCU’s Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies.
Despite Clark and Jutfelt’s work showing that CO2 does not seem to have much effect on fish behavior, they still worry about other aspects of climate change.
They are not climate “deniers” or hard-core skeptics. But they believe in scientific integrity, and that is a rare thing these days.
Almost a decade ago, Tim Clark was fascinated by the remarkable data of the effect of CO2 on fish behavior coming from JCU.
He wanted to study the physiological reasons for this effect. But once he started his experiments, he was unable to replicate the original JCU work. With his coworkers, he started a systematic replication study.
While this was occurring, one of the JCU fish-behavior scientists, Oona Lonnstedt, had returned home to Sweden where she undertook more fish behavior work on micro-plastics.
She “discovered” that microplastics also affected fish behavior making them more susceptible to being eaten by predators.
But in 2017, the Magnificent 7 were able to prove, after a long battle with Uppsala University, that Lonnstedt’s work was fraudulent – she had made up the data.
The question was then asked – what about Lonnstedt’s work while she was at JCU, where she had worked on the influence of climate change on reef fish. And had she learned fraud by herself or was there something more sinister?
In early 2020, the Magnificent 7 published their replication study. All the major results from JCU fish behavior studies were unable to be replicated.
They were 100% wrong. Much of the work was done by the group leader Prof Philip Munday and Danielle Dixson, who had since moved to U. Delaware.
The article in Science focuses on other work from Munday and Dixson – 22 papers. Clark and Jutfelt have called for an inquiry by funding bodies and universities, but it seems that nothing has happened.
The Science article contains allegations of fraud that will have to be properly answered. Some of it is very concerning.
But it is not just the Magnificent 7 who are questioning whether fraud was committed. Other scientists from Holland, Spain, and the UK have pointed out inconsistencies and suspicious data.
There is also now testimony from co-workers of Munday and Dixson, “some of whom monitored Dixson’s activities [in the lab] and concluded she made up data” according to Science
Predictably, the scientific “establishment” has attacked the whistleblowers and much of the Science article is devoted to this.
Perhaps the most scandalous attack came from Hans-Otto Portner from the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany who does not seem to believe hard questions should be asked.
Portner, a co-chair of one of the IPCC’s working groups, stated that “building a career on judging what other people did is not right.”
Even worse, he apparently wanted to keep the scandal quiet and objected to the Magnificent 7’s work stating, “if such a controversy gets outside of the community, it’s harmful because the whole community loses credibility.”
Presumably, it is better to bury possible fraud than damage the reputation of their comfortable little science community.
The truth is a secondary concern.
Equally worrying is that none of the universities or science funding bodies seem to have bothered to do a proper investigation.
The Science article, by Martin Enserink, is long, thoroughly researched, but well worth the read. It shows how corrupted the scientific establishment, from the funding bodies to the journals, has become.
But it also shows that there still are scientists who value the truth over all else – and will jeopardize their careers to find the truth.
It also shows that we need a formalized system for replicating important science results – especially if it is being used for public policy decisions.
The present system of peer review, which is now well known to have, roughly, a 50% failure rate, is a pathetic apology for a quality assurance system.
In Australia, I have been advocating for an Office of Science Review that would fund the type of work that the Magnificent 7 took upon themselves – replication, checking, and testing of important scientific work.
My interest is the Great Barrier Reef. I believe much of the work claiming damage to the Reef has serious flaws. But most importantly, almost none of it has been subjected to rigorous replication or checking.
It is time that the science organizations stop pretending there are no quality problems. This denial of the quality assurance problems is far worse than any possible fraud that may have been committed by individual scientists.
The major institutions are deceiving the public about the reliability of their work.
We are supposed to trust them but how can we?
Read more at GWPF
In another eucalypt-related article, snow gums in Australia’s sub-alpine areas (we have no real alpine areas) are being decimated by beetle larvae. Snow grasses are also under attack from moth larvae.
For those who remember the Insectageddon scares of 2016 and 2019, whereby insects like rain and cold would be a thing of the past, it may come as a surprise that Anthropogenic Climate Change is apparently causing some insects to become more prevalent.
Naturally, such increases have been seen before, but we don’t understand these population swings anywhere near well enough and, therefore, they are scary. So too is the meteorological record. Australia has World-class weather records, yet in my neck of the woods, that’s nearing only 150 years of daily measurements. Naturally, a century and a half is but a blink of a geological and ecological eye. We have far, far, far fewer data collections on insect populations in the sub-alpine communities. Put the two together and that makes this even scarier.
Nature will always offer up potential for such scares for it is always in a state of flux. We can see it on the Great Barrier Reef and we can see it in the peaks of the Great Dividing Range.
The Anthropogenic Climate Change flux we see in ecological science runs the full gamut from scary to scarier. Indeed, even to scarier squared. This snow gum article didn’t quite go that far, but it is a useful contribution to unnecessary panic none the less.
The death of snow gums is no laughing matter of course, but ecological science doesn’t appear to care much about castigating green policies which make catastrophic bushfires more likely to decimate sub-alpine woodlands and grasslands. Maybe that’s because bushfires, like insects, may be explained away as the fault of Anthropogenic Climate Change. After all, we can’t simply blame nature. Or greenies.
An article in an Australian newspaper sums up the state of ecological science.
It is about the “rarest species of eucalypt” in the greater Sydney region, which has recently been ‘discovered’ with only old trees left and no seedlings.
However, a quick internet search leads to the discovery of a date of 1954 attached to this tree type, suggesting that it has been known for quite some time. Not only that, it is not even regarded as a species, but a rare hybrid population that, in a previous environmental assessment was not considered worthy of much in the way of conservation works, if any.
The newspaper is spinning the narrative to suit the politics.
This, of course, is irrelevant if all that was sought is an opportunity to talk about climate change threatening eucalypts. Indeed, a rescue mission has been undertaken to plant it somewhere else as a climate change contingency.
As usual one can easily explain such data. Money. It’s always about money, money, money. No wonder the Bible says 1 Timothy 6:10; “For the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil…..” and 2 Timothy 3:2 “For men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money,…….”
Carbon dioxide levels can be dangerous to people also…
Apparently, seeking a reduction of CO2 changes human behavior, including making people:
lose their ability to smell the bulldust of job-destroying politicians and subsidy-seekers,
become hyperactive in the presence of woke celebrities,
lose their tendency to swim any political direction other than hard left
and have impaired vision when presented with any evidence of rampant pseudo-scientific manipulation of the truth.