Old forests capture plenty of carbon
>> Wednesday, July 18, 2012
LETTERS FROM THE AGNO
March L. Fianza
Planting a new tree may be a less
effective way to sequester carbon than saving an old tree from the axe.
Old forests continue to accumulate
carbon at a much greater rate than researchers had previously thought, making
them more important as carbon sinks that must be factored into global climate
models, researchers say.
Until recently, it was assumed that
very old forests no longer absorbed carbon. The only new growth occurred in the
small spaces that opened up when large old trees died and decomposed, releasing
their accumulated carbon. The forests at large were therefore considered to be
carbon neutral, and accounted as such in climate models.
In the past decade or so, murmurs of
disagreement with this idea have grown louder, and individual projects have
found that even very old forests are capable of storing carbon thanks to tree
growth, the addition of new trees and a decreased rate of respiration in old
trees.
Since the mid 1990s, more
sophisticated data collection projects have measured carbon fluxes in forests
around the world. In particular, data has been shared between members of
FLUXNET, a global network of observatory towers that measure the exchange of
carbon dioxide, water vapor and energy between ecosystems and the atmosphere.
Now SebastiaanLuyssaert of the
University of Antwerp, Belgium, and his colleagues have taken advantage of all
this new data to produce a meta-analysis of studies that monitored 519 plots of
temperate and boreal forest between 15 and 800 years of age. Their conclusion,
published in Nature this week, is that old-growth forests are, in general,
still absorbing carbon. Primary boreal and temperate forests, which make up 15%
of global forests, sequester about 1.3 gigatonnes of carbon a year, give or
take half a gigatonne. That amounts to about 10% of the global net ecosystem
productivity, which was previously accounted for elsewhere.
***
The conclusion makes sense,
according to Susan Ustin, a plant ecologist at the University of California,
Davis. When determining the age of a tree, one counts its rings. Each of those
rings represents the transformation of atmospheric carbon into the living
tissue of the tree. In any one year, the death and decomposition of roots or
branches may outweigh the carbon sequestered in the trunk - but over time, any
significant growth must involve net carbon uptake. "If they are carbon
neutral at 400 years old, how are they going to make it to 1,000?" she
asks. "If it was really carbon neutral, the trees would die."
Overturning the old idea that mature
forests are carbon neutral may be the work of more than one paper, and this
certainly isn't the first to propose that they continue to absorb the
greenhouse gas. But Luyssaert hopes this analysis will help tip the scales.
"Just challenging the dogma isn't new, but the data that has been used to
challenge it was a lot more limited in the past," he says.
The implications are many.
Scientists who were assuming that old-growth was carbon neutral may have
consequently been overestimating sequestration in other ecosystems. Climate
models may have to be re-examined. And policies that give credits to
governments or companies for sequestering carbon may want to incorporate the
protection of old-growth forests into their menu of options.
Indeed, the heartwarmingly green
action of planting a tree may actually be second-best to keeping an old tree
from the axe: "probably for a couple hundred years, until the young one
got big enough to have the same amount of carbon as one of these old
trees," estimates Ustin.
Tim Griffis, a University of
Minnesota researcher who mans one of FLUXNET's observation towers, adds that
the work "shows the power of the FLUXNET network".
But that network is getting harder
to operate, as it segues from being cutting-edge research into part of a
longer-term dataset. "Many in the community are already finding it
difficult to keep their sites funded," says Griffis. "I think there
does need to be a serious conversation about how we are going to keep this
record going." – Emma Marris
This article by Emma
Marris was published online on September 10, 2008. It was taken from
the “Nature” magazine, an internationally published weekly journal of science.
It is a new research that discredits what many foresters, Filipinos and
officials of the DENR have claiming all along that old trees are just like
people that when they get older that do not function any better that younger
trees. Mind you, trees are never comparable to men. I see however that such a
comparison has been constantly stated to the media by a few of the men in the
DENR, probably to justify the permits it issued to its very special clients.
– marchfianza777@yahoo.com
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