At
the very least, wildfires and CO2 emissiona from forests act as
powerful positive feedbacks
Forest
Emissions, Wildfires Explain Why Ancient Earth Was So Hot
The
release of volatile organic compounds from Earth's forests and smoke
from wildfires 3 million years ago had a far greater impact on global
warming than ancient atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide, a new Yale
study finds
5
February, 2014
The
research provides evidence that dynamic atmospheric chemistry played
an important role in past warm climates, underscoring the complexity
of climate change and the relevance of natural components, according
to the authors. They do not address or dispute the significant role
in climate change of human-generated CO2 emissions.
Using
sophisticated Earth system modeling, a team led by Nadine Unger of
the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies (F&ES)
calculated that concentrations of tropospheric ozone, aerosol
particles, and methane during the mid-Pliocene epoch were twice the
levels observed in the pre-industrial era — largely because so much
more of the planet was covered in forest.
Those
reactive compounds altered Earth's radiation balance, contributing a
net global warming as much as two to three times greater than the
effect of carbon dioxide, according to the study, published in the
journal Geophysical Research Letters.
These
findings help explain why the Pliocene was two to three degrees C
warmer than the pre-industrial era despite atmospheric levels of
carbon dioxide that were approximately the same as today, Unger said.
"The
discovery is important for better understanding climate change
throughout Earth's history, and has enormous implications for the
impacts of deforestation and the role of forests in climate
protection strategies," said Unger, an assistant professor of
atmospheric chemistry at F&ES.
"The
traditional view," she said, "is that forests affect
climate through carbon storage and by altering the color of the
planet's surface, thus influencing the albedo effect. But as we are
learning, there are other ways that forest ecosystems can impact the
climate."
The
albedo effect refers to the amount of radiation reflected by the
surface of the planet. Light-colored snowy surfaces, for instance,
reflect more light and heat back into space than darker forests.
Climate
scientists have suggested that the Pliocene epoch might provide a
glimpse of the planet's future if humankind is unable to curb carbon
dioxide emissions. During the Pliocene, the two main factors believed
to influence the climate — atmospheric CO2 concentrations and the
geographic position of the continents — were nearly identical to
modern times. But scientists have long wondered why the Pliocene's
global surface air temperatures were so much warmer than Earth's
pre-industrial climate.
The
answer might be found in highly reactive compounds that existed long
before humans lived on the planet, Unger says. Terrestrial vegetation
naturally emits vast quantities of volatile organic compounds, for
instance. These are critical precursors for organic aerosols and
ozone, a potent greenhouse gas. Wildfires, meanwhile, are a major
source of black carbon and primary organic carbon.
Forest
cover was vastly greater during the Pliocene, a period marked not
just by warmer temperatures but also by greater precipitation. At the
time, most of the arid and semi-arid regions of Africa, Australia,
and the Arabian peninsula were covered with savanna and grassland.
Even the Arctic had extensive forests. Notably, Unger says, there
were no humans to cut the forests down.
Using
the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies Model-E2 global Earth
system model, the researchers were able to simulate the terrestrial
ecosystem emissions and atmospheric chemical composition of the
Pliocene and the pre-industrial era.
According
to their findings, the increase in global vegetation was the dominant
driver of emissions during the Pliocene — and the subsequent
effects on climate.
Previous
studies have dismissed such feedbacks, suggesting that these
compounds would have had limited impact since they would have been
washed from the atmosphere by frequent rainfall in the warmer
climate. The new study argues otherwise, saying that the particles
lingered about the same length of time — one to two weeks — in
the Pliocene atmosphere compared to the pre-industrial.
Unger
says her findings imply a higher climate sensitivity than if the
system was simply affected by CO2 levels and the albedo effect.
"We
might do a lot of work to reduce air pollution from road vehicle and
industrial emissions, but in a warmer future world the natural
ecosystems are just going to bring the ozone and aerosol particles
right back," she said. "Reducing and preventing the
accumulation of fossil-fuel CO2 is the only way to ensure a safe
climate future now."
The
modeling calculations were performed on Yale University's omega
supercomputer, a 704-node cluster capable of processing more than 52
trillion calculations per second.
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