Credit: CC0 Public Domain
The
carbon stored globally by plants is shorter-lived and more vulnerable to
climate change than previously thought, according to a new study.
The findings have implications for our
understanding of the role of nature in mitigating climate change, including the
potential for nature-based carbon removal
projects such as mass tree-planting.
The research, carried out by an
international team led by Dr. Heather Graven at Imperial College London and published in Science,
reveals that existing climate models underestimate the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) that is
taken up by vegetation globally each year, while overestimating how long that
carbon remains there.
Dr. Graven, Reader in Climate Physics in
Imperial's Department of Physics, said, "Plants across the world are
actually more productive than we thought they were."
The findings also mean that while carbon
is taken up by plants quicker
than thought, the carbon is also locked up for a shorter time, meaning carbon
from human activities will be released back into the atmosphere sooner than
previously predicted.
Dr. Graven added, "Many of the
strategies being developed by governments and corporations to address climate
change rely on plants and forests to draw down planet-warming CO2 and
lock it away in the ecosystem.
"But our study suggests that carbon stored in living plants does not stay there as long as we thought. It emphasizes that the potential for such nature-based carbon removal projects is limited, and fossil fuel emissions need to be ramped down quickly to minimize the impact of climate change."
Video abstract. Credit: Heather Graven / Imperial College
London
Using carbon
Until now, the rate at which plants
use CO2 to produce new tissues and other parts
globally—a measure known as Net Primary Productivity—has been approximated by
scaling up data from individual sites. But the sparsity of sites with
comprehensive measurements means it has not been possible to accurately
calculate Net Primary Productivity globally.
Plants' productivity has been
increasing since the early 1900s and more CO2 is currently taken up by plants than is released back to the air.
Researchers know that approximately 30% of CO2 emissions by human activities are therefore stored in plants and
soils each year, reducing climate change and its impacts.
However, the details of how this
storage happens, and its stability into the future, are not yet well
understood.
In this study, radiocarbon (14C)—a radioactive isotope of carbon—was combined with model simulations to
understand how plants use CO2 at a global scale, unlocking
valuable insights into the interaction between the atmosphere and the
biosphere.
Tracking carbon from bomb tests
Radiocarbon is produced naturally,
but nuclear bomb testing in the 1950s and 1960s increased the level of 14C in the atmosphere. This extra 14C was available to plants globally, giving researchers a good tool to
measure how fast they could take it up.
By examining the accumulation
of 14C in plants between 1963 and 1967—a period when there
were no significant nuclear detonations and the total 14C in the Earth system was relatively constant—the authors could assess how
quickly carbon moves from the atmosphere to vegetation and what happens to it
once it's there.
The results show that current,
widely-used models that simulate how land and vegetation interact with the
atmosphere underestimate the net primary productivity of plants globally. The
results also show that the models overestimate the storage time of carbon in
plants.
Role of the biosphere
Co-author Dr. Charles Koven, from
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, U.S., said, "These observations are
from a unique moment in history, just after the peak of atomic weapons testing
in the atmosphere in the 1960s.
"The observations show that
the growth of plants at the time was faster than current climate models
estimate that it was. The significance is that it implies that carbon cycles
more rapidly between the atmosphere and biosphere than we have thought, and
that we need to better understand and account for this more rapid cycling in
climate models."
The authors say the research
demonstrates the need to improve theories about how plants grow and interact
with their ecosystems, and to adjust global climate models accordingly, to
better understand how the biosphere is mitigating climate change.
Co-author Dr. Will Wieder, from the
National Center for Atmospheric Research, U.S., said, "Scientists and
policymakers need improved estimates of historical land carbon uptake to inform
projections of this critical ecosystem service in future decades. Our study
provides critical insights into terrestrial carbon cycle dynamics, which can
inform models that are used for climate change projections."
The work highlights the usefulness of radiocarbon measurements in helping to unpick the complexities of the biosphere. The study's authors include German physicist Ingeborg Levin, a pioneer in radiocarbon and atmospheric research, who sadly died in February.
Source: Study finds plants store carbon for shorter periods than thought (phys.org)
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