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Earth Science

Plants May Be Absorbing 20% More CO2 Than We Thought, New Models Find (newatlas.com) 81

An anonymous reader writes: Using realistic ecological modeling, scientists led by Western Sydney University's Jürgen Knauer found that the globe's vegetation could actually be taking on about 20% more of the CO2 humans have pumped into the atmosphere and will continue to do so through to the end of the century.

"What we found is that a well-established climate model that is used to feed into global climate assessments by the likes of the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) predicts stronger and sustained carbon uptake until the end of the 21st century when extended to account for the impact of some critical physiological processes that govern how plants conduct photosynthesis," said Knauer.

Mathematical models of ecological systems are used to understand complex ecological processes and in turn attempt to predict how the real ecosystems they're based on will change. The researchers found that the more complex their modeling, the more surprising the results – in the environment's favor.

Current models, the team adds, are not that complex so likely underestimate future CO2 uptake by vegetation... [T]he modeling makes a strong case for the value of greening projects and their importance in comprehensive approaches to tackling global warming.

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Plants May Be Absorbing 20% More CO2 Than We Thought, New Models Find

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  • So plants... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Like plant food.

    Good to know!

    Going to just laugh at the doomsayer prophets.

    • by Striek ( 1811980 )

      Or, you could read the article. The title here is pure clickbait (thanks, editors!)

      The full title is "A new version of the CABLE land surface model (Subversion revision r4601) incorporating land use and land cover change, woody vegetation demography, and a novel optimisation-based approach to plant coordination of photosynthesis" and says NOTHING about increased carbon absorption.

      This is amateur science reporting at its worst. This is how "Fake News" happens.

      • by drnb ( 2434720 )

        This is how "Fake News" happens.

        Which "fake nes"? The fake news that says humanity will die in a few years or the fake news that says nothing abnormal is going on?

        • by jhoegl ( 638955 )
          If you cant tell, then that is your problem to deal with.
          • by drnb ( 2434720 )

            If you cant tell, then that is your problem to deal with.

            Actually the problem lies with the people who fail to realize both are fake. They impede learning the actual truth and moving on with the science and engineering necessary to solve the problem.

        • This is how "Fake News" happens.

          Which "fake nes"? The fake news that says humanity will die in a few years or the fake news that says nothing abnormal is going on?

          Both. WTF? I know being reasonable and acknowledging that there's a problem is a real head-scratcher for some. Almost as much of a headscratcher as not running around screaming about how we're all gonna die tomorrow. But, believe it or not, facts do show there is something happening, and it's something we most likely need to figure out a way to address if we'd like to keep our home habitable. I think the doomsday shit is sometimes a bit hyperbolic, but it's EXCEEDINGLY clear that the head-in-the-sand crowd

          • by drnb ( 2434720 )

            This is how "Fake News" happens.

            Which "fake nes"? The fake news that says humanity will die in a few years or the fake news that says nothing abnormal is going on?

            Both. WTF? I know being reasonable and acknowledging that there's a problem is a real head-scratcher for some.

            Its almost as big a problem as poor reading comprehension. I assume you are twisted up over "humanity will die in a few years". Please go back and re-read that line. Your reading comprehension seems to be failing quite spectacularly. You implied guesswork is also failing quite spectacularly. I suggest taking off you political lens while re-reading.

      • The article cites multiple articles. The relevant article for said claim is:
        https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adh9444

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Well, yes. Plants *in general* will grow larger and faster with more CO2. However not all plants are *carbon* limited; some very important ones are *nitrogen* limited. Experiments have been done raising crops in high CO2 environments, and it turns out wheat, corn, rice, and soybeans all yield *less*.

      However, carbon limited plants like poison ivy and sumac will add a lot of biomass, sure.

      • Extreme heat also creates smaller yields - growing under solar panels increases yields in extreme heat areas
    • And weeds never die. Eastern Europe proves that as soon as you stop farming or leave a village, trees come up like weeds and 20 years later, everything is covered.
  • by Striek ( 1811980 )

    That is, assuming I can understand the paper well enough (there are a lot of acronyms I am unfamiliar with). It points to the under-estimate of CO2 uptake in some places, and the over estimate in others. If I understand the conclusings correctly, it is not proposing that we're sinking more carbon than previously thought, but that the inter-annual variation in carbon uptake and effect of greenhouse gases is more than thought - i.e. plants breathe more then we thought they did - maybe more in the summer, less

    • Hm, I read through their paper looking for what you're saying but what I read matches the article title and summary.

      Where did you get that this is just a wider variant range based on season and not a total greater uptake? I'd like to review that section if you could please identify the section or page number. Thank you.

      (There were a few graphs I didn't fully understand at first glance but they didn't seem to say anything different, it's possible I didn't spend enough time on them).

      • by Striek ( 1811980 )

        I was reading the wrong article apparently. My mistake. The one I was reading was this [copernicus.org], the last linked article.

        Oops.

  • So we can get back full steam to cutting and burning the Amazon rainforest!
    • Re:Oh, good! (Score:4, Informative)

      by Luckyo ( 1726890 ) on Sunday December 03, 2023 @02:35PM (#64051241)

      Tropical forests may be a positive or a negative in terms of global warming. We actually don't know. They emit a lot of CO2 and water vapor, and they soak up a lot of CO2 as well. It's a very aggressive cycle.

      The forests we know are very good absorbers of CO2 are temperate region ones.

      If you need a map, take a look here: https://research.wri.org/sites... [wri.org]

      Functionally, temperate forests are best, boreal and subtropical forests are great (we're not sure which one is better, mainly due to subtropical starting to have a small version of tropical problem explained below), and tropical forests are a huge question mark, either net good (but worst of the four types) or actual net bad. There's an active debate on the topic right now. You can find both sides well represented, (though political argument is still on the side of them being best ever "lungs of the earth" nonsense, due to longstanding well entrenched activism on the topic of Amazon).

      The main problem with tropical forest is the very same that makes tropical agriculture so difficult. Lots of sun + high temperature + lots of humidity = extremely active insects and microbiome. Most organic matter is consumed long before it can sink into the soil. Activity is so extreme that soil quality remains poor, and emissions of things that insects and microbes emit (many of which are greenhouse gasses more potent than CO2) as they devour this organic matter are very high. So there's a very good chance that tropical forests actually emit more greenhouse gasses as a function of "total effect towards warming the planet through greenhouse effect" than they take in CO2.

      As you go to colder climates, this extreme activity is absent, which makes soils richer as they get to absorb said organic matter that isn't all aggressively devoured before it gets a chance to go deeper, which also makes agriculture much more efficient. This also means less emissions and more capture by plants as various compounds needed for plant growth. You can see this in how much fertilization is needed for efficient growth in relevant soils.

      So if you want more reduction, plant trees in zones that are suitable for temperate forests first and foremost. Then go for subtropical and boreal. Good news for the planet is that boreal forests are being pushed out in favor of temperate across massive landmass of Eurasia and North America as planet warms, which is primarily boreal right now. The speed at which the "belt" is moving is round 150-300m per year last I checked. Which across Fennoscandic countries, Russia and Canada means massive boon to absorption.

    • How terrible would it be if we remove all these poisons from our atmosphere and preserve our wildlife, and it doesn't do anything for the climate?
  • ...that we must fund deforestation and lock up anyone who plants a tree. Throw those logs onto the pile of burning books, along with the trannies and the libs.

  • In the aquarium trade, it's become all the rage to inject CO2 into your aquarium. The idea is that the plants will grow faster/healthier using the extra CO2 in their environment. This is so popular there's a whole cottage industry of CO2 injection systems for aquariums now. A bunch of citizen scientists have done side-by-side experiments. While not scientifically rigorous, the benefits seem to be at least 20% if not 50% improvement in growth.

    it seems to track that plants not in aquariums would absor

    • Yea, aquarium plants. Now pass the shatter and don’t forget to turn off the butane this time.
    • by dryeo ( 100693 )

      Aquariums generally have lots of other nutrients such as nitrates so it works well and actually cleans the water. Wilderness, not so much and adding CO2 is like adding sugar to our diet, sure we get bigger but we also get less healthy. Same things happen to plants generally, you get more leggy growth and sickly plants due to only increasing one nutrient, namely carbon.
      Greenhouses are similar, semi-closed environment where you can crank up all the nutrients in a balanced way and increase growth.

  • Earth has been getting greener for last 30 years, mostly in semi-arid regions. More CO2 means plants can close pores tighter to retain moisture.

    Stop the hysteria, doomers.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      The greening has mostly been due to policies by China and India. This is evident as the greening stops neatly at national borfers
      • Wrong, Australia, central Africa, the Amazon Basin, southeast United States, and Europe are all places that have had consistent greening trends from the increase Co2. Doomers are always lying.
  • The biggest need -- and by far! -- is oceanography. There are many vital feedback loops we don't understand in the ocean with currents, the ice caps, microbiota and coral, and shellfish just some of the groups playing a part. The ocean absorbs billions of tons of carbon per year. Biology, zoology, geology, physics... There's room in this for a hundred different fields of study and more than enough Nobel prizes to go around just from the potential offshoots. Chaos theory, fluid mechanics, macrobiology, even
  • They are not sequestering it. Over a lifetime of a tree (including the decomposing phase), the net CO2 impact is close to zero.
    The only way to affect CO2 in the atmosphere is to stop digging out the already sequestered carbon. All new sequestration efforts are several orders of magnitude away from the current extraction rate.

    • They are not sequestering it. Over a lifetime of a tree (including the decomposing phase), the net CO2 impact is close to zero.

      Doens't matter, if you plant a million NEW trees that will remove more CO2 from the atmosphere.

      Also the existing trees finding more CO2 in the atmosphere, will as noted in this study accelerate growth and consume even more CO2.

      Yes maybe they release that later after they die, but in the meantime they consume more.

  • In the UK and Central Europe, someone switched the global warming heaters off.
  • what this article reveals:

    a) the models get better when they are more complex (surprise!)
    b) current models aren't complex
    c) we're still discovering important stuff about how aspects of the climate system work
    d) we predict as if we know how everything works.

    It is crazy scary absurd as exemplified by the hue and cry over sequestering spent radioactive material while embracing sequestering CO2. Biology is not science ... and nor is the climate debate.

  • That is the question. Because currently (and in the past) they sure as hell didn't do that, else we wouldn't have the problem we clearly have.

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