Global warming's ecosystem double whammy

September 17, 2008

Plants and soils act like sponges for atmospheric carbon dioxide, but new research finds that one abnormally warm year can suppress the amount of carbon dioxide taken up by some grassland ecosystems for up to two years. The findings, which followed an unprecedented four-year study of sealed, 12-ton containerized grassland plots at DRI is the cover story in this week's issue (September 18) of the journal Nature.

"This is the first study to quantitatively track the response in carbon dioxide uptake and loss in entire ecosystems during anomalously warm years," said lead author Jay Arnone, research professor in the Division of Earth and Ecosystem sciences at DRI. "The 'lagged' responses that carry over for more than one year are a dramatic reminder of the fragility of ecosystems that are key players in global carbon sequestration."

The plants and soils in ecosystems help modulate the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere. Plants need CO2 to survive, and they absorb most CO2 during spring and summer growing seasons, storing the carbon in their leaves, stems and roots. This stored carbon returns to the soil when plants die, and it is released back into the atmosphere when soil bacteria feed on the dead plants and release CO2.

The four-year DRI study involved native Oklahoma tall grass prairie ecosystems that were sealed inside four, living-room-sized environment chambers. The dozen 12-ton, six-foot-deep plots were extracted intact from the University of Oklahoma's prairie research facility near Norman, Okla., in order to minimize the disturbance of plants and soil bacteria. Inside the DRI's sunlit-controlled EcoCELL chambers, scientists replicated the daily and seasonal changes in temperature, and rainfall that occur in the wild.

In the second year of the study, half of the plots were subjected to temperatures typical of a normal year, and the other half were subjected to abnormally warm temperatures -- on the order of those predicted to occur later this century by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. In the third year of the study, temperatures around the warmed plots were turned down again to match temperatures in the control plots. The CO2 flux -- the amount of carbon dioxide moving between the atmosphere and biosphere -- was tracked in each chamber for all four years of the study.

DRI's EcoCELL facility gave the scientists an unprecedented degree of control over the enclosed ecosystems. Not only could they create the same air temperature conditions from year-to-year, they could also independently control the soil temperature in each chamber -- a key feature that enhanced the ecological relevance of the results. Each containerized ecosystem also sat on "load cells," the type of scales used to weigh trucks on highways. Scientists used the scales to track the amount of water that was taken up and lost by the plants and soil in both normal and abnormal years. Thus, each containerized ecosystem served as a weighing lysimeter, an instrument that's used to measure the water and nutrients that percolate through soils.

The scientists found that ecosystems exposed to an anomalously warm year had a net reduction in CO2 uptake for at least two years. These ecosystems trapped and held about one-third the amount of carbon in those years than did the plots exposed to normal temperatures.

"Large reductions in net CO2 uptake in the warm year were caused mainly by decreased plant productivity resulting from drought, while the lack of complete recovery the following year was caused by a lagged stimulation of CO2 release by soil microorganisms in response to soil moisture conditions," explained co-author Paul Verburg, also from DRI.

Numerous studies have found that the Earth's atmospheric CO2 levels have risen by about one-third since the dawn of the Industrial Age. CO2 helps trap heat in the atmosphere, and political and economic leaders the world over are debating policy and economic reforms to reduce the billions of tons of CO2 that burned fossil fuels are adding to the atmosphere each year.

"Our findings confirm that ecosystems respond to climate change in a much more complex way than one might expect based solely on traditional experiments and observations," said study co-author James Coleman, vice provost for research and professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Rice University. "Our results provide new information for those who are formulating science-based carbon policies."

Source: Rice University

3.5 /5 (38 votes)  

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Roach
Sep 17, 2008

Rank: 2.7 / 5 (7)
Well now wait a minute. "Large reductions in net CO2 uptake in the warm year were caused mainly by decreased plant productivity resulting from drought..." drought and abnormally warm are two separate issues. The experiment is flawed because an abnormally dry, but cool year could produce the same results, or an abnormally dry, but wet year could be benificial. or I could be wrong. Either way anyone could have told them a drought affects the soil conditions for more than the year of the drought. This was something farmers figured out about the time we move from Hunter/Gathers to an agriculture species.
agg
Sep 17, 2008

Rank: 2.7 / 5 (7)
Blah blah blah, CO2. Global warming.
Please publish, it's science stupid.
gmurphy
Sep 18, 2008

Rank: 2.6 / 5 (5)
this is a big surprise, a detailed study examining the previously unknown dynamics of CO2 uptake in soils is undertaken and Roach dismisses it as "flawed" This is important work, eliminating uncertainty about our environment and all agg has to say is "blah blah blah". I honestly don't understand why you read science websites.
Roach
Sep 18, 2008

Rank: 3.4 / 5 (5)
All I'm saying is a dought decreases plant activity for years to come, has nothing to do with global warming, CO2, or Humans. Look at how well the teperate plantlife in the Sahara has done since it's change 5000 years ago. I'd love to be convinced. But If I told you your car was flurecent black you'd at least want some decent arguement why before you concidered jumping on the band wagon. If they took money from useless studies like this one they could fund real studies that might persuade people like me. Or they could fund desalination research and bring clean drinking water to underdeveloped countries. Or better cheaper hybrid cars. Or thermionic air conditioner and refridgerator units. There are ways to persuade people to be green even without scare tactics. I'd drive a reasonable chemically safe hybrid, not because of GHGs but because of the $4.09 I paid per gallon yesterday.
GrayMouser
Sep 21, 2008

Rank: 3 / 5 (2)
We could pump sulfur in to the upper atmosphere (just like a volcano) to increase the Earth's albedo. That way we wouldn't have to worry about the stored carbon being released.

Or is that cheating?
MikeB
Sep 27, 2008

Rank: 3 / 5 (2)
Gray, this is not about solutions, is it? It is more about a small group trying to control us.
Rank 3.5 /5 (38 votes)
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