Contradicting a century-old hypothesis, increased global carbon dioxide  levels seem to be shrinking plants instead of fostering their growth.  Animals from polar bears to marine iguanas are being stunted too.
In 1896, Svante Arrhenius published calculations predicting that  doubling  CO2 levels would trigger a global temperatures increase of  about 5-6 degrees C. 
"We would then have some right to indulge in the pleasant belief that   our descendants, albeit after many generations, might live under a   milder sky and in less barren surroundings than is our lot at present," Arrhenius said during a lecture that same year.But it seems reality hasn't lived up to Arrhenius' verdant dreams of vigorous vegetation.
 "Plants were expected to get larger with increased atmospheric carbon  dioxide," but changes in temperature, humidity and nutrient  availability seem to have trumped the benefits of increased CO2, said  researchers from the National University of Singapore in the journal Nature Climate Change.
Forty-five percent of the species studied now reach smaller adult  sizes than they did in the recent past. The researchers, led by Jennifer  Sheridan and David Bickford, point to climate change induced warmer  temperatures and changing habitats are possible culprits in the case of  the shrinking creatures.
 "We do not yet know the exact mechanisms involved, or why some  organisms are getting smaller while others are unaffected". "Until we understand more, we could be risking negative consequences that we can't yet quantify."
Environment-Clean-Generations
The change was dramatic in cold-blooded animals. Only two decades of warmer temperatures were enough to make reptile runts.
 An increase of only one degree Celsius caused nearly a 10 percent  increase in metabolism. Greater use of energy resulted in tiny tortoises  and little lizards.
Fish are smaller now too. Though overfishing has played a part in  reducing piscine proportions, the researchers also point to experimental  results showing that warmer temperatures also stunt fish growth.
Warm-blooded animals weren't immune from the climate change caused size change.
 Many birds are now less bulky, including passerines (the order that  includes cardinals, blue jays, and crows) as well as goshawks and gulls.
 
Mammals have been miniaturized too. Soay sheep are scrawny. Red dear  are runts. And polar bears are puny, compared to historical records.This isn't the first time this has happened in Earth's history.
 Fifty-five million years ago, a warming event similar to the current  climate change correlated to beetles, bees, spiders, wasps and ants  shrinking by 50 to 75 percent over several thousand years.
 Woodrats and squirrels also shrunk by about 40 percent.
That event, the Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, happened over a longer time than the current global warming.
 The speed of modern climate change could mean, "organisms may not  respond or adapt quickly enough", especially those with long generation  times. by "environment clean generations"
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