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Sharks and rays benefit from global warming, but not from CO2 in the Oceans

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Summary
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79% Informative

Palaeobiologists investigated whether and how global warming influences the diversity of sharks based on climate fluctuations between 200 and 66 million years ago .

According to the study, higher temperatures and more shallow water areas have a positive effect, while higher CO2 levels have a clearly negative effect.

The study was recently published in the scientific journal Biology .

Jürgen Kriwet : "By protecting sharks and rays, we are investing directly in the health of our oceans and therefore also in the people and industries that benefit from these ecosystems" Without the top predators, the ecosystems would collapse, he says. "Without these top predators.. we would not be able to sustain our ecosystems," he says.

VR Score

90

Informative language

97

Neutral language

48

Article tone

formal

Language

English

Language complexity

72

Offensive language

not offensive

Hate speech

not hateful

Attention-grabbing headline

not detected

Known propaganda techniques

not detected

Time-value

long-living

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no external sources

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