The earth itself is acclerating the demise of the human species
28 November, 2016
You
read that right. The Earth is now going to help
us kill ourselves.
In
a massive new study published Wednesday in the influential journal
Nature, no less than 50 authors from around the world document a
so-called climate system “feedback” that, they say, could make
global warming considerably worse over the coming decades.
That
feedback involves the planet’s soils, which are a massive
repository of carbon due to the plants and roots that have grown and
died in them, in many cases over vast time periods (plants pull in
carbon from the air through photosynthesis and use it to fuel their
growth). It has long been feared that as warming increases, the
microorganisms living in these soils would respond by very naturally
upping their rate of respiration, a process that in turn releases
carbon dioxide or methane, leading greenhouse gases.
It’s
this concern that the new study validates.
To
read article GO HERE
Scientists
have long feared this ‘feedback’ to the climate system. Now they
say it’s happening
30
November, 2016
At
a time when a huge pulse of uncertainty has been injected into the
global project to stop the planet’s warming, scientists have just
raised the stakes even further.
In
a massive new study published Wednesday in the influential journal
Nature, no less than 50 authors from around the world document a
so-called climate system “feedback” that, they say, could make
global warming considerably worse over the coming decades.
That
feedback involves the planet’s soils, which are a massive
repository of carbon due to the plants and roots that have grown and
died in them, in many cases over vast time periods (plants pull in
carbon from the air through photosynthesis and use it to fuel their
growth). It has long been feared that as warming increases, the
microorganisms living in these soils would respond by very naturally
upping their rate of respiration, a process that in turn releases
carbon dioxide or methane, leading greenhouse gases.
It’s
this concern that the new study validates. “Our analysis provides
empirical support for the long-held concern that rising temperatures
stimulate the loss of soil C to the atmosphere, driving a positive
land C–climate feedback that could accelerate planetary warming
over the twenty-first century,” the paper reports.
This,
in turn, may mean that even humans’ best efforts to cut their
emissions could fall short, simply because there’s another source
of emissions all around us. The very Earth itself.
“By
taking this global perspective, we’re able to see that there is a
feedback, and it’s actually going to be massive,” said Thomas
Crowther, a researcher with the Netherlands Institute of Ecology who
led the research published Wednesday.
The
new study is actually a compilation of 49 empirical studies,
examining soil carbon emissions from research plots around the globe.
The different studies produced variable results, including some cases
in which soils actually pulled carbon from the air rather than
releasing it. However, the researchers insist there was a pattern
globally that was “predictable”: Soil carbon losses generally
tended to track how much warming a region had seen, and how thick the
upper soil layer was.
The
paper therefore found that the biggest losses were in Arctic regions,
where soils are warming rapidly and also where they are quite thick —
but also that well down through the mid-latitudes, soils were also
losing carbon. And the net result for the research plots as a whole
was a loss of soil carbon.
The
paper then extrapolated these findings for the globe, finding that by
the year 2050, the planet could see 55 billion tons of carbon (which
converts to 200 billion tons of carbon dioxide, were it all to be
released in this form) released from soils. That’s if we continue
on with a “business as usual” scenario of global greenhouse gas
emissions and accompanying warming.
“It’s
of the same order of magnitude as having an extra U.S. on the
planet,” said Crowther. The world has less than 1,000 billion tons
of carbon dioxide remaining to emit in order to preserve a reasonable
chance of holding the planet’s warming below 2 degrees Celsius, a
widely embraced target, so soil emissions could help to bust the
carbon budget.
Crowther
argues that until now, the science community has often left this
potential carbon feedback from planetary soils out of its
calculations because it wasn’t well enough understood. “The
entire magnitude of this feedback was removed from several of the
earth system models, the models that inform [the United Nations’
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change], because of its massive
uncertainty,” he says.
Moreover,
he adds that while the study did heavily consider the Arctic and
thus, regions of permafrost soil (a huge repository of planetary
carbon), it only took into account emissions from the upper layer of
soil, about 10 centimeters thick. So if warming liberates carbon from
deeper permafrost layers too — a major fear — then the numbers
presented above for soil emissions could be too small.
There
is, of course, one potential offset to this — even as the Earth’s
surface is losing carbon from soils, it also appears to be putting at
least some back again due to an increased growth in vegetation, which
is being fertilized by more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, in tern
enhancing plant photosynthesis. However, Crowther does not believe
this will suffice to offset soil carbon losses.
A
recent study found that in the past decade or more, plant growth had
indeed been sequestering more carbon dioxide — but as the lead
author told the Post, “It’s good news for now. We can’t expect
it to continue.”
Another
researcher who focuses on Arctic soils and reviewed the study for the
Post, permafrost expert Ted Schuur of Northern Arizona University,
agreed with Crowther on plant growth, suggesting that even if models
predict it may offset soil loses, field studies like the ones
summarized here don’t support that.
“This
impressive work again highlights the largest losses of soil C from
high latitudes, which agrees with field measurement and incubations
that we’ve summarized in our work,” said Schuur. “These losses
offset gains that are predicted in soil C in other temperature and
subtropical ecosystems.” Schur added that since the study only
considers the first 10 centimeters of soil in the Arctic, “we might
consider that a minimum loss since there is a lot of soil C beneath
that.”
Two
other outside experts contacted by the Post took a similar tack.
“The
authors correctly point out the lack of information from tropical
ecosystems, in fact the southern hemisphere is not represented. Thus
we need more data,” said Charles Rice, a soil microbiology
professor at Kansas State University who pointed out several
limitations in the paper. But Rice nonetheless concluded that “the
high latitudes are particularly vulnerable and a large source of CO2
back to the atmosphere. This highlights the need to do early action.”
The
study gives “strong support to the hypothesis that soils will
release a substantial amount of carbon in response to rising air
temperatures,” added Jonathan Sanderman, a scientist with the Woods
Hole Research Center who studies soil changes under climate change.
“This is really critical, because if the additional release of
carbon is not counterbalanced by new uptake of carbon by plants then
it’s going to exacerbate climate change and increases the urgency
to immediately reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”
But
Sanderman also noted studies have suggested that better management of
agricultural soils could sequester large amounts of carbon, perhaps
enough to offset the losses projected in the new study.
“While
this paper shows how soils are part of the problem, it’s important
to note that soils can also be part of the solution,” Sanderman
continued.
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