logo
welcome
ScienceDaily

ScienceDaily

Climate, dead zones and fish: Solving a 'wicked problem' in Lake Erie and beyond

ScienceDaily
Summary
Nutrition label

78% Informative

Study: Limits on flow of nutrients into Lake Erie from agriculture may be too restrictive for some species of fish.

They are, however, suited to maintain healthy fisheries until the middle of this century amid a warming climate.

Finding the right balance between fishery and water quality considerations is a delicate and ever-moving target.

Study provides a template and prior knowledge that can be applied to other systems, team says.

Climate-hypoxia model is robust and reliable over long time periods.

Model is designed to be "embarrassingly simple," Michalak says.

"We can't be playing whack-a-mole when it comes to environmental systems".

VR Score

90

Informative language

97

Neutral language

37

Article tone

formal

Language

English

Language complexity

58

Offensive language

not offensive

Hate speech

not hateful

Attention-grabbing headline

not detected

Known propaganda techniques

not detected

Time-value

long-living

External references

no external sources

Source diversity

no sources

Affiliate links

no affiliate links