Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
Well, the BBC, which as I understand it is an acronym for “Blindly Broadcasting Cra- ziness”, gives us its now-standard tabloid style headline, that
Climate change is ‘killing penguin chicks’ say researchers
Of course they’ve included the obligatory “awwwww-inspiring” picture, viz:
Naturally, the researchers didn’t say what the Beeb claimed. What they said was in their paper, Climate Change Increases Reproductive Failure in Magellanic Penguins, viz:
Statistical Analyses
We tested whether chick age, amount of rain, or low temperature affected a chick’s probability of dying during a storm using our 28 years of data with multiple logistic regressions.
Mmmm … testing to see whether more young chicks die in extremely cold, rainy weather … seems to me that even city kids would know the answer to that one.
In any case, how does this blinding insight into penguin mortality tie into climate? Glad you asked. It has to do with their model … or rather their models.
Figure 1. A list of the combinations of three predictor variables used in their twenty-one different models. These are used to model the odds of a penguin chick dying in a storm. The three predictor variables are age (a), amount of storm rain (r), and low minimum temperatures (l). Sadly, they did not archive their data … so this is just pretty pictures at present. Click the image to embiggen.
Their logic and observations go like this. They’ve noticed that the period during which the penguins lay their eggs has gotten longer over the last 30 years. Their hypothesis is that this will make them more vulnerable to the storms. Only thing is, how to prove it?
Why, make up a bunch of computer models of chick mortality, of course. Why not? Or as they say:
We simulated the effects of breeding synchrony on chick mortality in storms. We simulated the proportion of chicks likely to die in a storm on a given day by the hatching spread: for 13 days (the mean for 1983–1986) and 27 days (the predicted value for the early 2080s, based on an increase of 0.15 days per year; see results).
I do love the “extend a trend to infinity” logic of saying that by 2080 (or to be exact, the “early 2080s”) the Magellanic penguins will have a 27 day spread in their egg-laying dates … and using that same logic, we can be sure that by the year 2500 they will be breeding randomly throughout the year … but I digress …
So they simulated the chick deaths from storms, and then to connect that to climate change, they say:
Climate models predict that the frequency and intensity of storms will continue to increase.
Hey, that settles it for me. Since the data says there’s been a change in the length of their laying season, and since models say that the storms will kill more chicks if their laying season gets longer, and since they’ve included one sentence to establish that climate models predict more storms in the future, heck, their work is done.
It’s a beautiful chain of imaginary causation, the scientific version of the bumper sticker that says, “God said it – I believe it – That settles it!”, with “Models” in place of the Deity.
I have to say, this all seems to me like a huge waste of good data. These fine folks have done a solid, workmanlike job of collecting a very large mass of data over 28 years … but then they simply waterboarded the data until it confessed. One example of this is their choice of models.
First, while it is legit to try 21 models, at the end of that process the model you find should be pretty amazing, or else you’re just flipping coins until you get seven heads in a row and declaring victory … especially when you just keep adding parameters.
Next, they make a laudable effort to only use real-world variables in their models. For example they say:
We included all 2-way interactions except age × age squared because we did not want to include a cubic fit for age which is unlikely to have biological meaning.
I like that point of view, that the predictor variables should be real-world variables with physical or biological meaning, and age, rain, and low temperatures certainly fit the bill. Now that seems legit until you get to some of the combinations they use. For example, the model that they finally chose has the predictor variables of the following form.
A + A2 + R + A*R + A2*R + A2*L + A2*R*L
where “A” is age, “R” is rain, and “L” is low temperatures.
And that all looks logical … until we factor and simplify it, and we get
R + A (R + 1)+ A2 (L + 1) (R + 1)
So in fact, rather than the 7 variables they say they are using, in fact they are only using 5 variables:
A, R, A2, (R + 1), and (L + 1)
Unfortunately two of these variables that they are using, “rain plus one” and “low temperatures plus one”, have no conceivable physical meaning.
And that, in turn, means that their best model is actually nothing more than curve fitting using unreal, imaginary parameters without biological or physical meaning.
It is for this reason, among others, that I’m very cautious when I make models, and in general I don’t like combination additive-multiplicative models of the type they use. Yes, I’m sure that people can make an argument for using them … I’m just saying that such models make me nervous, particularly when they end up with eight or ten parameters as in their models.
Here’s the strange part for me. Since they have good data on the length of the egg laying season, and good data on storms and chick deaths, why not just use the data to actually calculate the relationship between storm-related chick deaths and the length of the egg laying season? Perhaps I missed it, but I couldn’t find that calculation in all of their work. Instead, they make a complex model of the situation for which they already have data …
I see this as another tragic casualty of the ongoing climate hysteria. But I suppose I’m just being idealistic, and I’m overlooking the fact that in this current insane situation, it’s much easier to get funding if you say “Hey, I’m not just studying a bunch of birds that are too dumb to remember how to fly, I’m doing vital work on the climate crisis! Think of the grandchildren!” …
Finally, despite their whizbang model, I strongly doubt the researchers’ conclusion that the change in the length of the breeding season will lead to more chick deaths. Natural species survive in part because their methods of living and eating and giving birth are flexible, and they are able to change them in response to changing circumstances in such a way as to increase their odds of survival. The idea that the penguins are changing their breeding habits in the direction of communal suicide seems like … well, like an unusual claim that would require supporting evidence that is much more solid than a computer model with imaginary parameters to make me believe it.
Ah, well … onwards, ever onwards …
w.
N.B: If you disagree with me, please quote EXACTLY what it was that I said that you disagree with. A claim that I don’t know what I’m doing, or that I’m just wrong, or that I should go back to school, any of that kind of vague handwaving goes nowhere because I don’t have a clue what has you (perhaps correctly) upset … you could be right and no one will ever know it. So quote what you object to, that way we can all understand what you are referring to.

cont..
The world population is estimated at 1,300,000 pairs: 950,000 along the Argentinian coast, 100,000+ in the Falklands (Malvinas) and 200,000+ in Chile (Ellis et al. 1998). Population trends differ between colonies. The two largest colonies in Argentina have both shown decreases during the last decade, but other small colonies have grown.
Conservation Actions Underway,
Radio-tracking has shown that breeding birds regularly travel long distances, and were found to be frequenting shipping lanes, where many birds were getting oiled. Changes in Chubut provincial law moved the shipping lane after the findings were given significant publicity, and thus the oiling threat has been somewhat reduced (Boersma in litt. 2007).
Gareth Phillips says: @ur momisugly January 30, 2014 at 5:18 am
…The Penguin chicks show what happens when organisms do not adapt, and it’s a lesson for all of us….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
I suggest you go back and read the information on Penguin Evolution in my comment and then pay special attention to the temperature charts I posted.
Then you might pay attention to what William McClenney, a California Licensed Professional Geologist and Registered Environmental Assessor has to say.
The Sky is Falling – or Revising the Nine Times Rule …the human being is nine times more susceptible to rumor than it is to fact. That simple rule explains a dramatic amount of human behavior.
…There will be a great many of you (88.9%, to be precise) that will have a difficult time with this…
…Zooming back to 2 million years ago, we see with the clarity of archaeological conviction that climate change has been very good to us. Spend some time reading tons of information on hominid evolution, and you will soon come to know that scientists in that field have long speculated that climate change over the past few millions of years, yes, those same two million or so years has been a very effective agent provocateur in our evolution. Our brain case size has experienced dramatic increases, in fits and starts, of course, to go from about 500 cubic centimeters (cc) to about 2,500cc in the last 2-3 million years….
….Eventually, via numerous glaciations, and the increased braincase size that these wrenchingly long freezing events spurred, we made it intact to the Nine Times Rule So the question really begs to be asked. Will it take another (let’s call it the next, since its actually time for the next one now) ice age to “smarten us up” some more?….
part IV
At times the idiocy of the sheeple, and their demonstration of the infallibility of the Nine Times Rule, make one want to wish for the next glaciation to get here ASAP!
A few days ago they had some snow.
http://www.martingrund.de/pinguine/pinguincam1.htm#1
The situation is simple.
We have to face the fact that the BBC’s science/environmental reporters are incompetent.
finally found it ,
“Causes of Death
Most Magellanic penguin chicks died from starvation or predation”
Another comment that sheds additional light on Garethman’s statement
“This is not spinning, or alarmism, this is just stats.The highest rainfall on record is exceptional in anyones books.”
Has gotten booted into the ether. It is the comment @ur momisugly January 30, 2014 at 6:22 am
This is one I’m not going to read another word of the article or any the comments.
But I’m reasonably certain the article title would be more accurate if it read: “Weather Change Affects Reproductive Failure…..” That would undoubtedly have made it harder to get published, however. Although there is the possibility that the editor was short material, dug up this one and retitled it, I suppose.
“If precipitation regimes at nesting colonies change resulting in more than 2.5 inches of rain falling during a year, a possible consequence of climate change, most chicks will not survive due to burrow collapses and hypothermia (Boersma 2009).
That can’t be right. Granted, the climate is quite arid in that part of Patagonia, but on average the area gets about 8 inches of rain per year.
More and more often findings of research conducted in the UK and reported on BBC science programmes have been blaming climate change. The trouble is, when I have read many of these papers, the periods of research have been 20 years or less (isn’t that weather!), but the temperature has had a downward trend over this 20 year period.
This presents a major problem for science. One, why have reviewers not picked up on this point. Two, if the changes these researchers are observing is not attributable to climate change/weather they are missing the most important point, what is causing these changes. Three, as they are being funded to gain better understanding of their topic/research and they are not gaining that understanding, why are the funding authorities not checking on this and withdrawing future grants. Four, I suppose without mentioning “climate change”, they wouldn’t get the funding in the first place.
Science research and funding authorities have really got themselves in a mess.
“…the human being is nine times more susceptible to rumor than it is to fact. That simple rule explains a dramatic amount of human behavior.
…There will be a great many of you (88.9%, to be precise) that will have a difficult time with this…”
If the rumour believing group is nine times the fact believing group that would mean 90% should be having problems.
Now if he meant to say that only 1/9 of the population could discern fact from rumour that would leave 8/9 who can’t. ie “…the human being is EIGHT times more susceptible to rumour than it is to fact.”
I guess Mr. William McClenney’s 88.9% is just a rumour.
…wait a minute…
We tested whether chick age, amount of rain, or low temperature affected a chick’s probability of dying during a storm using our 28 years of data with multiple logistic regressions.
WTF?
Lower Temperatures is not “Global Warming”, and despite their precious models saying “CAGW = More Storms”, we know the exact opposite is true
http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.com/search?q=warming+storm+activity
So they ended up (hap-haphazardly, as Willis shows) testing to see if Global Cooling would kill more Penguins, came to the conclusion it would, and then criticized “Global Warming” for that outcome???
If they weren’t so obsessed with desperately trying to paint CO2 as their Villain regardless of the actual facts, their conclusion would have been “yay for Global Warming, it saves Penguins!”
I am sure the weather effects the early days of every animal on the planet today and in the past.
Gail, billies will be billies and the relationship between breeding and photoperiod is strongest at increasing distance from the Equator. If memory serves, there can be two distinct breeding periods in the southern U.S. States.
Of course, the alternative hypothesis is, the changing climate forced your goats into unnatural breeding behavior.
NielC: “Three, as they are being funded to gain better understanding of their topic/research and they are not gaining that understanding, why are the funding authorities not checking on this and withdrawing future grants.”
You make a fundamental mistake. They are being funded to indoctrinate the public with the AGW scam. That is why is why the fake “inquiries” into Climategate scandal whitewashed UEA and its staff by avoiding asking the right questions.
That is why the Penn State “investigation” into Mann’s conduct let him chose the question in advance.
That is why Peter Gleick was not prosecuted , despite having admitted what amounts to wire fruad, a serious criminal offence.
I wonder when global warming research is going to introduce disease to the penguin population like happened to the worlds various frog populations. As with the frogs global warming will be blamed. The contagious researcher will likely be cautious to hide this fact should it occur.
Perhaps the researchers should be quarantined for months before and after their research.
To prevent spread of some virus that could be spread to the human or other animal populations perhaps their equipment should be destroyed by incineration or sinking.
I would like somebody to use this information for a study:
“In the end, they teased out the carbon dioxide fertilization effect from all other influences and calculated that this could account for an 11 percent increase in global foliage since 1982”
http://www.climatecentral.org/news/study-finds-plant-growth-surges-as-co2-levels-rise-16094
The study could be something like this: “Over abundance of food from excessive vegetative growth as a result of increasing CO2, causing severe over population and crowding in many animals, resulting in an increase in disease and death rates”
This seriously has a more authentic scientific connection than many of these silly studies do.
Here is another penguin which was thought to be in worse condition than previously thought! We must act then!
The only problem is…………
Now what does high sea ice extent do to these birds?
Sent this a couple of times to BBC correspondants but dont seem to want to report it
http://www.ucdenver.edu/about/newsroom/newsreleases/Pages/Study-shows-wind-turbines-killed-600000-bats-last-year.aspx
This fits in well with the most recent story I read in the Toronto Star (think NYT or Guardian wannabe) concerning the latest (of a long line) of “good goddess, the monarch butterflies are disappearing!!!” stories.
Not to make light of what would be a tragic occurrence, but of course, buried in the “this is due to climate change” sub-leads is “they are cutting down the trees the monarchs use” in Mexico. Just maybe, MAYBE, that has something to do with it, huh?
Here are some other issues affecting chicks. [Note: Oiled birds find it more difficult to hunt for chick food].
Gail Combs says:
January 30, 2014 at 7:42 am
Another comment that sheds additional light on Garethman’s statement
“This is not spinning, or alarmism, this is just stats.The highest rainfall on record is exceptional in anyones books.”
Has gotten booted into the ether. It is the comment @ur momisugly January 30, 2014 at 6:22 am
@ur momisuglyGarethman
Hi Gail, it’s still on the thread as far as I can see, maybe it has returned. 🙂
BBC=Biased Broadcasting Corporation.
You have to admit, though, that counting dead electrons in a model is much easier and funner than counting dead baby penguins.
The pale, speckled peppered moth turned black in many parts of Britain following the Industrial Revolution over the space of a few decades, enabling it to blend in against soot-covered trees and avoid predators.”….Sorry, disproved as pure BUNKUM… A. The trees were NEVER that “soot covered”. B. Some of the work done by a researcher in the United States, with the moths, showing them being “pecked at by birds” if they were WHITE against a black surface (photos) …were revealed by the fellow’s graduate students, in the ’40’s, to have been staged with dead moths glued to the trees, and surounded by suet.
Alas, bunkum…whether climate change, Gorebull warming or “Aha, another example of evolution…” tend to persist for years, after they have been disproved. (Take for example, anti-biotic resistance of bacteria. Proposed as caused by “random” mutations. Shown in the early ’90’s to come from changes to the DNA made by the “first generation survivors”, which made them antibiotic resistant. Mechanism, unknown…!)