The research recorded clownfish living on coral reefs slimmed down drastically when ocean temperatures rocketed in 2023.
"Yes, he backs off the madness, but even the stuff he left in meant that we had the highest tariff rate yesterday than we'd had since 1934," Prof Wolfers said.All signs point to this being a fight that the Republican president won't give up easily.
"You can assume that even if we lose, we will do it another way," Trump's trade advisor Peter Navarro said after Thursday's appeals court ruling.While the litigation plays out, America's trade partners will be left guessing about Trump's next move, which is exactly how he likes it.A French horn player has said that being part of an orchestra that includes disabled and neurodivergent musicians has helped her to be herself.
Georgina Spray, 25, plays for and is assistant music leader for the Birmingham National Open Youth Orchestra (NOYO) ensemble.She is set to perform with the orchestra in an inclusive concert experience at Birmingham Town Hall on 8 June.
"As an autistic musician, NOYO has given me opportunities within the music sector… I'm in an ensemble where I belong and I can be myself," she said.
"I started playing the French horn when I was 12, and I love making music and playing with other musicians."It included the lowering and removal of import taxes on some of the UK's main exports to America, such as cars, steel and aluminium.
That aspect of the deal is not impacted by the Court of International Trade's ruling, but the blanket 10% tariff on most other UK goods entering the US has now been called into question.How that part of the deal could change remains uncertain, with the agreement between both governments yet to be implemented.
The UK government has not commented on the court ruling but said it was working to ensure British businesses can benefit from the deal "as quickly as possible".Follow the twists and turns of Trump's second term with North America correspondent Anthony Zurcher's weekly