Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
We should be careful to get out of an experience only the wisdom that is in it — and stop there; lest we be like the cat that sits down on a hot stove-lid. She will never sit down on a hot stove-lid again — and that is well; but also she will never sit down on a cold one any more.
—Pudd’nhead Wilson’s New Calendar
I was reminded of this Mark Twain quote by a recent paper called “Acute sun damage and photoprotective responses in whales” published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B (hereinafter “Sunburnt Whales”). Their Abstract reads in part:
We conducted photographic and histological surveys of three seasonally sympatric whale species to investigate sunburn and photoprotection. We find that lesions commonly associated with acute severe sun damage in humans are widespread and that individuals with fewer melanocytes have more lesions and less apoptotic cells. This suggests that the pathways used to limit and resolve UVR-induced damage in humans are shared by whales and that darker pigmentation is advantageous to them.
Figure 1. A whale working on suntanning its stomach
So what does Pudd’nhead Wilson have to do with sunburnt whales?
Unfortunately, the authors of Sunburnt Whales did not stop with learning the wisdom in the experience. They went on to tell us how the whales are being threatened by the upcoming Thermageddon™:
Taken together, our results show that whales exhibit lesions typical of acute UVR exposure, suggesting that the thinning ozone layer poses a significant and rising threat to the health of our oceans’ whales. Considering that UVR is expected [by climate models] to increase 4 per cent in the tropics and up to 20 per cent in the poles, more studies are needed to fully understand the consequences of UVR-induced damage and the evolutionary significance of cetacean pigmentation.
OK, what’s their evidence for that? Well, they measured UV-induced blisters and a corresponding measure of UV exposure called “cytoplasmic vacuolation” in a small number of whales in 2007, 2008, and 2009. Both measures increased over the period, although the changes were statistically insignificant for cytoplasmic vacuolation.
For the blisters, in 2007, 12% of the whales had blisters (N, the number of whales measured, was 48). In 2008, 28% had blisters (N=28). In 2009, 68% had blisters (N=22). How do they explain that?
Despite the short time frame, our results would suggest that, as predicted, heightened exposure to UVR secondary to global and regional ozone depletion is leading to more skin damage in whales.
Say what? They’re claiming that the large two-year changes in whale skin health was caused by increased UV … but unfortunately, there’s a huge, glaring problem with their claim. According to NASA:
UV Exposure Has Increased Over the Last 30 Years, but Stabilized Since the Mid-1990s
There has been no increase in the UV radiation in the last fifteen years … but the authors of Sunburnt Whales claim that increased UV has caused whale blisters to quintuple (five times as many) in two short years.
Now I’m sorry, but I simply don’t believe that claim. I can believe that whales have more blisters. But I don’t believe that UV radiation, which has not changed in the last 15 years, has caused whale blisters to suddenly increase five-fold in two years.
They claim that this blister increase is related to the fact that these whales spend time in Baja California, where tropical UV levels are high. But UV levels have changed less in the Tropics than elsewhere. NASA (op. cit.) says about the post-1979 increase:
The high latitudes of the southern hemisphere have seen ultraviolet exposure increase by as much as a quarter. The low latitudes have seen little increase, and the mid-and-high latitudes of the northern hemisphere have seen about a five percent increase.
The low latitudes, where Baja California is located, have seen “little increase” in general, and even less in the last 15 years. So no, I don’t think UV increases are harming the whales, because for the last 15 years UV hasn’t increased. And in Baja California, even the increase since 1979 is on the order of only 5% or less.
Judith Curry keeps on about how we need to repair the trust between the public and climate scientists, and I agree with her. However, she thinks the scientists are not explaining things well, that it is a communications problem.
I say the problem has nothing to do with communication. The problem is bogus climate science being shovelled in our direction by the Royal Society and the other “scientific” journals. Until this kind of bovine waste-product stops being shipped in containers saying “100% Peer Reviewed Climate Science Inside”, people are not going to believe anything a climate scientist says, even though it may, through some unusual combination of misunderstandings and coincidences, actually be true. How does this kind of clearly nonsensical junk ever, ever get through peer review?
Oh, yeah, one final note. Seems to me if you want to see if the UV exposure is increasing the blisters on whales, how about measure some whales year after year and see if the blisters are increasing? Seems like a bozo move, simple, give you good data to confirm or deny the hypothesis.
Which is probably why the authors of Sunburnt Whales were very careful not to do that. They report:
In each season recaptured individuals were excluded from the analyses, the first capture being the one included.
Yeah, that’s the way to tell whether blisters are increasing, throw out valid data … not. Where is the headslap icon when I need it?
PS – I’m back in the Solomon Islands for a week, where even the electrons move slowly, so my replies may be delayed … have patience.
PPS – After writing this but before posting it, I discovered that the Proceedings of the Royal Society B have a letter responding to the study, which says in part:
This article is quite interesting in that the exposure of whales to UV and their response in terms of skin cancer lesions suggests the need to worry about the possible future effects of climate change on wildlife. This suggests that any non-fur protected or pigment protected species is at risk. The risk is higher at the equator where the protective ozone layer is naturally less than at mid and high latitudes.
However, the attribution of the observations to existing changes in UVR is misleading at best. In the equatorial regions, there have been no statistically significant changes in UVR [Herman, 2010 in JGR]. The significant changes start as small increases at mid latitudes, which only become medically significant at high latitudes. Unless I missed it, the article does not mention cancer lesion measurements from the past as an indicator that there has been any change in the whale’s health over time. The lack of cause and effect studies makes the statements about ozone change in this article “alarmist”. There are enough real problems with climate change and chlorine induced ozone change without suggesting unproven and unlikely problems. …
What he said …

What about the mullet? I understanding they’re getting angrier. I thought it was due to climate change but it is probably due to ozone. Why?
Oh, what a cynical lot you are.
I’m concerned. By exterpolation, the percentage of whales observed with blisters for 2010 will be around 98% (N=number observed – going down each year – so, say 4) – and of course in 2011 it will be 100% on one observed whale..
Slightly off-subject, but there was a recent article in The Sunday Times by Jonathan Leake, their Environment correspondent – who in his article trotted out the mantra that it was likely that the Arctic would be ice free in the summer any time soon. I wrote in a letter for publication, inviting him to look at the total consistency of sea ice year-on-year as per your graphs from several learned institutions – needless to say my letter wasn’t published, and I got a sniffy note from one of their minions saying that my comments had been passed on to Mr Leake.
Moral – ignore the facts in pursuit of a good story…
Did I mention my desire to see a PhD recall prgram being instituted?
The
scientistssnake-oil salesmen who wrote this pap, together with the peer reviewers who gave it the green light, and the journal that published it, would be severely reprimanded in a just world.Of course, there will be alarmists who accuse us of wanting to “witch-hunt” anyone with pro-AGW views, as they have said regarding the perfectly justified attacks on Mann. But as with Mann, these BS’ers are selling anti-science to the public, for grants donated at the expense of the public, which gives governments excuses to pass ever more draconian laws and taxes which adversely affect the lives of the public. Words cannot express the contempt I feel for these lowlifes.
Let’s not be too harsh on those seeking grant money. After all, street walkers will also say anything to get your money. Either way, if you fall for it you get the same result.
The main problem with the study was that it was cross-sectional in design, which meant they should have labeled their speculations as such, but did not do so.
They point to a 2003 study to link UV and skin cancers. Melanoma – one of the skin cancers has been steadily increasing in incidence in the past four decades – is postulated to have a UV exposure link. The 2003 study citation, therefore is incomplete and misleading.
The authors explain that they studied
“cytoplasmic vacuoles”
“intracellular edema”
“cytoplasmic glycogen”
Firstly – all three putative lesions – will produce the same histopathologic appearance, or mimic each other very closely. The authors’ claim that they unequivocally distinguished these three different entities from each other, and quantified them separately, is very weak, to put it charitably.
Secondly, the term “intracellular edema” is scientifically inaccurate and reveals the authors’ lack of understanding of pathologic processes. Edema is the accumulation of fluid, of varying compositions but usually transudative in the *extracellular* space. Consequently a term like “intracellular edema” is meaningless for the wider scientific/medical/technical community. This is indeed reflected by the picture used to illustrate ‘intracellular edema’ – it does not show anything! A better picture could have been provided.
Moreover, UV damage causes fluid accumulation in between cells – intercellular edema. This is a feature of blistering disorders, of which UV-related skin damage is one. Is this what the authors meant?
Thirdly, the authors provide a picture showing extensive perinuclear retracion artifacts, to illustrate what they called as grade 3 cytoplasmic vacuolation (see supplementary figures). This appears, at least to me, as being outright false and extremely unconvincing. Such retraction artifacts are common, and are attributed to processing. The mismatch between what is termed grade 1 and grade 2 vacuolation is clearly evident in their own illustrations – I would encourage readers to take a look themselves. The authors do not provide any clarifications.
Someone needs to do a study of the UV effect on Brazileiras sunning in their natural habitat on Ipanema beach.
By the way, should that have been n instead of N?
Hey, c’mon guys, son’t be so hard on them. They are obviously going for the Ig Nobel Prize. Clicked on ‘Roys’ link (11/13/2010 at 3:12 am) above and found this:
“Karina Acevedo-Whitehouse and Agnes Rocha-Gosselin of the Zoological Society of London, UK, and Diane Gendron of Instituto Politecnico Nacional, Baja California Sur, Mexico, for perfecting a method to collect whale snot, using a remote-control helicopter.”
Obviously photographic and histological surveys are inadequate to the purpose here. We need actual samples. I suggest these folks get on board with the Japanese, who have been doing hands-on whale studies ever since the whaling ban.
There are many articles on studies related to the burning of rocket fuel and the impact on ozone.
Rocket Launches Damage Ozone Layer, Study Says
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/04/090414-rockets-ozone.html
Bromine-Chlorine Coupling in the Antarctic Ozone Hole
http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?N=4294819517+269&Ns=HarvestDate%
Perchlorate and the Proposed Ballistic Missile Defense System …
http://www.cpeo.org/pubs/BMDS-PEIS.doc7C1&as=false
No need for me to repeat why this is execrable science, since Willis did it so much better than I ever could. One wonders how species actually survived without us humans looking after the climate for them!
But John F. Hultquist (November 12, 2010 at 10:15 pm) has made a very good point in regard to nutrition.
From my own observations (anecdotical, sure) I know that Border Collies, who have very short white fur on top of their noses, will get sun burn when taken from rescue kennels into new homes. They’ve suffered stress, had inadequate food and not enough exercise outdoors – result: sunburn on noses, which can become infected.
Perhaps we could interest the kind people at WWF to start collecting for waterproof sunblock for the poor whales?
I’m surprised they didn’t claim that “ocean acidification” was also to blame for the increased skin sensitivity and blistering. I guess that would be another $tudy though.
“There are enough real problems with climate change and chlorine induced ozone change without suggesting unproven and unlikely problems. …”
So, what they’re saying is, we have enough (mythical) problems caused by CAGW to try to defend, we don’t need new ones. These are such trying times for thermageddonists. If I were them, I’d can Cancun.
I SOOO want a job like that. Awesome. It’s like winning the lottery.
Well, shiver me bleedin timbers…..not only be it worser than thuspected but a real cauth for alaaaarm …..
From the paper, conclusively, “Considering that UVR is expected to increase four percent in the tropics and up to 20 percent in the poles [39], more studies are needed to fully understand the consequences of UVR-damage and the evolutionary significance of cetacean pigmentation.”
Where’s the evidence for the key postulate of increasing UVR? I could go on but this is junk….both the authors and RS as publishers, let alone NERC, must know that.
How can we expect climate scientists to provide any solutions when they are proving again and again that they are the problem.
“How does this kind of clearly nonsensical junk ever, ever get through peer review?”
I am sure that question was rhetorical, but it is clear that they (academic researchers & their peer reviewers) are all feeding from the same public-supported grant trough. They all have a personal stake in keeping the public scared so the money keeps flowing their way. How many taxpayers would support these researchers specifically if they simply said we are going to study sunburned whales ?? I am guessing none & these folks would be out of a job.
Researchers commonly like to represent themselves as having no economic drivers (ie , they aren’t funded by “big oil”, “big tobacco”, “big industry” & other “evil forces”) but when you depended personally on bringing in grant money for your job & livelihood, your economic motivation is extremely high. Anyone who has been in a graduate level science program (at least in the US) has seen this 1st hand. Until this unhealthy relationship between researchers, reviewers & grant money is broken, you will get continue to get research with an alarmist tone.
Willis writes:
“I say the problem has nothing to do with communication. The problem is bogus climate science being shovelled in our direction by the Royal Society and the other “scientific” journals.”
Exactly right. They are willing concede anything except for the underlying hypothesis being fundamentally wrong. Interestingly this is the general response we’re getting from the liberal establishment on a whole range of issues. For example, Obama is now spouting the same drivel – “our policies are right and if we had communicated better you too would understand they are right”. That too is bullcrap as what they really believe is that we’re too stupid to understand. Obama gave this away beginning with the infamous pre-election remark about rural America clinging to guns and religion and post-election saying the recession has us so afraid that we can’t think clearly. Anything but admitting the underlying hypothesis (whether it’s catastrophic CO2 emissions or health care or Wall Street bailouts) there’s never doubt expressed about the hypothesis only some lame permutation of “you’re not bright enough to understand the hypothesis”. Intellectual elitists convinced of their own superiority and infallibility annoy the hell out of me.
Can someone explain to me why a group of “Scientists” (probably with sun stroke) are allowed to not only disturb but “Capture” a protected species in their breeding grounds?
Great post Willis, I did find this part to be encouraging:
“The lack of cause and effect studies makes the statements about ozone change in this article “alarmist”. There are enough real problems with climate change and chlorine induced ozone change without suggesting unproven and unlikely problems.”
To a “Modern Scientist” EVERYTHING bad is the result of manmade global change to the environment. Indeed, to not claim that this is true is a foolish, self-inflicted No-No of the highest order. The malady of EVERYTHING is rooted in the “root of all evil”, money. And who made money? People! And how does a Modern Scientist get more money? By blaming everything on People! This is PROVEN SCIENCE. Scientists prove it every day.
People, and the top .0001% especially–they what have PhD’s, are very suseptable to some as yet unknown, mind-numbing, manmade, chemical or biological agent that robs them of all reason and perspective. If a cure is not found soon, all will be lost; and history will record the beginning of another DARK AGE for mankind. Would it help if we placed all those afflicted with this disease on one of the Northern Hawaiian Islands?
Not entirely off topic:
New paper about our sun predicting a Grand Solar Minimum compared to the Maunder Minimum.
http://www.cdejager.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/2010-Variable-solar-dynamo3.pdf
I actualy read (skimmed the study) this comment I found curious” It is worth mentioning that we found no evidence that the population is ageing” How did they possibly examine the population with out a vey comprehensive study, also and more cogent, was the “tested” population on average aging and why would they not at least mention the results of finding the same whale each year, and when the tested whales migrated and how long they were in the southern waters could have a great deal to do with results, and, how did the UV change in each of the years in the test, and, and, and? none of which I saw in the study. Maybe I just missed it.
Yet another demonstration of why “peer review” means absolutely nothing in climate science. IPCC may as well cite NGO propaganda pamphlets; what is the difference?
I can see all kinds of fixes for this sunburnt whale problem. Distribute umbrellas. Coat the ocean surface with sunscreen. Provide feeding centers that force the whales to pass under a sunscreen chemical soaked tarp. Don’t laugh. We do that with cows with fly problems. Include sunscreen advertisements in whale magazines. After I have my second cup of Bailey’s coffee, I should be able to come up with more useful ideas. Or maybe just fall asleep. Which ever comes first in considering this globally devastating, alarmist, disrupting condition.
Their main conclusion was that whales with less skin pigment are more prone to skin cancer than those with normal pigment? Calling Captain Obvious. Sounds like someone is justifying a tropical whale watching vacation by calling it research. “More studies are needed to fully understand the consequences of UVR-induced damage and the evolutionary significance of cetacean pigmentation.” — I need a tropical whale watching vacation. Sign me up!
Wonder what the percentage of this sunburnt population are Irish whales? Hey! My hypothesis is just as valid as the one in the paper. Give me a grant and I’ll go to Ireland to study me whales.