Perilous Times
Rising temperatures reducing ability of plants to absorb carbon, study
warns
Research shows warming over past decade caused droughts that reduced
number of plants available to soak up CO²
* Alok Jha
*
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 19 August 2010 19.19 BST
Drought in agriculture Droughts have wiped out plants that would have
absorbed the carbon equivalent of all the man-made greenhouse gas
emissions from the UK every year. Photograph: Patrick Pleul/EPA
Rising temperatures in the past decade have reduced the ability of the
world's plants to soak up carbon from the atmosphere, scientists said
today.
Large-scale droughts have wiped out plants that would have otherwise
absorbed an amount of carbon equivalent to Britain's annual man-made
greenhouse gas emissions.
Scientists measure the amount of atmospheric CO² absorbed by plants and
turned into biomass as a quantity known as the net primary production.
NPP increased from 1982 to 1999 as temperatures rose and there was more
solar radiation.
But the period from 2000 to 2009 reverses that trend – surprising some
scientists. Maosheng Zhao and Steven Running of the University of
Montana estimate that there has been a global reduction in NPP of 0.55
gigatonnes (Gt). In comparison, the UK's contribution to annual
worldwide CO² emissions was 0.56Gt in 2007, while global aviation
industry made up around 0.88Gt (3%) of the world total of 29.3Gt that
year, according to UN data.
The researchers used data from the moderate resolution imaging
spectroradiometer (Modis) on board Nasa's Terra satellite, combined
with global climate data to measure the change in global NPP over the
past decade.
"The past decade has been the warmest since instrumental measurements
began, which could imply continued increases in NPP," wrote the Zhao
and Running in the journal Science.
But instead of helping plants grow, these rising temperatures instead
caused droughts and water stresses, particularly in the southern
hemisphere and in rainforests, which contain most of the world's plant
biomass. The growth there has been curtailed by lack of water and
increased respiration, which returns carbon to the atmosphere. These
problems counteracted any increases in NPP seen at the high latitudes
and elevations in the northern hemisphere.
Reduced plant matter not only reduces the world's natural ability to
manage CO² in the atmosphere but could also lead to problems with
growing more crops to feed rising populations or make sustainable
biofuels.
"Under a changing climate, severe regional droughts have become more
frequent, a trend expected to continue for the foreseeable future,"
said the researchers. "The warming-associated heat and drought not only
decrease NPP, but also may trigger many more ecosystem disturbances,
releasing carbon to the atmosphere. Reduced NPP potentially threatens
global food security and future biofuel production and weakens the
terrestrial carbon sink."
The researchers conclude that further monitoring will be needed to
confirm whether the decrease in NPP they have observed in the past
decade is an anomaly or whether it signals a turning point to a future
decline in the world's ability to sequester carbon dioxide.