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Global Warming can increase the capacity of trees to store Carbon

by | 15-10-2014 04:11 recommendations 0

One helpful action anyone can take in response to global warming is to plant trees and preserve forests. Trees and plants capture carbon dioxide during photosynthesis, thereby removing the most abundant greenhouse gas from the atmosphere and storing some of it in their woody tissue.

Yet global warming may affect the capacity of trees to store carbon by altering forest nitrogen cycling, concludes a study by the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL).

The paper summarizes the results of a 7-year study at Harvard Forest in central Massachusetts, in which a section of the forest (about one-quarter of an acre) was artificially warmed about 9oF above ambient, to simulate the amount of climate warming that might be observed by the end of the century without aggressive actions to control greenhouse gas emissions from fossil-fuel burning and deforestation.

The study confirmed, that a warmer climate causes more rapid decomposition of the organic matter in soil, leading to an increase in carbon dioxide being released to the atmosphere.

But the study also showed, for the first time in a field experiment, that warmer temperatures stimulate the gain of carbon stored in trees as woody tissue, partially offsetting the soil carbon loss to the atmosphere. The carbon gains in trees, the scientists found, is due to more nitrogen being made available to the trees with warmer soil.

Tree growth in many of the forests in the United States is limited by the lack of nitrogen.Warming causes nitrogen compounds locked up in soil organic matter to be released as inorganic forms of nitrogen such as ammonium, a common form of nitrogen found in garden fertilizer. When trees take up this inorganic nitrogen, they grow faster and store more carbon.

The study found that the biological processes that link soil warming, increased soil organic matter decay, increased nitrogen availability to trees, and increased tree growth will likely operate together in many temperate and boreal forests forests found in North America, Europe, Eurasia and much of the developed world. Tree growth in tropical forests is often limited by factors other than nitrogen, so lessons from this new study are not widely relevant in the tropics.

The carbon-nitrogen interactions at Harvard Forest will help us to make predictions of carbon storage in forest over the coming decades, the carbon balance of forest ecosystems in a changing climate will also depend on other factors that will change over the century, such as water availability, the effects of increased temperature on both plant photosynthesis and aboveground plant respiration, and the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide.

Trees being affected by global warming

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3 Comments

  • says :
    It's a great news, Nanditha. Thank you for sharing. I feel a bit relieved to hear that. But at the same time, expanding trees' capacity can't be the right answer to mitigate the climate change issue. This is really blessing event given by the nature but we all should play our role to mitigate the climate change :)
    Posted 20-10-2014 13:47

  • Rohan Kapur says :
    It is a real blessing of the Mother Nature to adjust itself to the changing circumstances. That's why & how the earth has evolved over the millions of years.
    It further means that collective green efforts of mankind will help Mother Nature to mitigate the harmful effects in the years to come.
    Thanks for the report, Nanditha.

    Posted 15-10-2014 19:34

  • Arushi Madan says :
    That's really interesting , Nanditha. Scientists keep simulating the temp increase to know the behaviour or outcomes like this which were unexpected . But as you concluded ,the carbon balance in eco system would also depend on other factors. Thanks for sharing.
    Posted 15-10-2014 14:00

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