Faster tree growth may not stem global warming
ARGONNE, Ill. (November 21, 2003) A new study, published
today in Science,
indicates that the potential for soils to soak up atmospheric carbon
dioxide is strongly affected by how long roots live. Large differences
in root replacement rates between forest types might alter current
predictions of how carbon absorption by soil will act to ameliorate
global warming from excess human-caused carbon dioxide.
The study, by researchers at Argonne National Laboratory, Duke
University, University of Illinois
at Chicago, and Oak Ridge
National Laboratory, was funded primarily by the U.S. Department
of Energy's Office of Science.
The new study used a novel technique to measure the longevity
of roots the source of some of the carbon that would be
transferred by decay into the soil in trees growing in forest
plots infused with a computer-controlled flow of carbon dioxide.
The flow was metered to maintain the higher atmospheric carbon
dioxide levels predicted to occur in the middle of this century.
Such an increase in carbon dioxide, caused by the burning of fossil
fuels and clearing of the world's forests, underlies the global
warming that scientists widely believe to have already begun.
The scientists' measurements revealed that the roots of loblolly
pine but not sweetgum trees growing in simulated mid-century air
at two experimental sites remained intact far longer and transferred
less carbon into soils than scientists had expected.
"Our data showed that fine root replacement varied from 1.2 to
9 years depending on root diameter and forest type," said Argonne
environmental scientist Roser Matamala, lead author of the Science article.
Co-author William Schlesinger, Dean of Duke's Nicholas
School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, called the
root study results "a huge change from dogma, which says that
these roots turn over all the time. This really says the roots
can last quite a while."
"Some forests would do a better job than others in taking up carbon
dioxide from the atmosphere and placing it into the soil," Matamala
said. "Pine forests have slow root replacement, which decreases
the potential to accumulate carbon in the soil in the short-term,
while the fast root replacement coupled with increased root production
in the sweetgum forest led to a rapid and significant increase
in soil carbon".
Some policy makers expect that the surge of human-produced carbon
dioxide will boost plant growth enough to remove much of the extra
gas from the atmosphere. The assimilated carbon dioxide, converted
into carbohydrates during photosynthesis, would thus be stored
in plant tissue for long periods, ameliorating the gas's potential
impact on predicted global warming. Under this scenario, significant
amounts of residual carbon would ultimately be sequestered in soil
particles when roots and other tree parts decay.
"The major implication for greenhouse management strategies is
that some forests won't transfer carbon from the atmosphere to
soils at the speed we need them to do it to reduce global warming," said
co-author Miquel Gonzalez-Meler at the University of Illinois at
Chicago.
To test how a carbon-dioxide-enriched atmosphere will actually
affect the environment, the researchers bathed test plots within
a growing loblolly forest near Duke and in plots of sweetgum-dominated
woodlands in eastern Tennessee with addition carbon dioxide. At
both the Duke and Oak Ridge test sites the extra carbon dioxide
is released from arrays of tower-mounted valves that are computer-controlled
to ensure levels of the gas expected in the air worldwide by mid-century.
During the first three years of these continuing seven-year experiments,
the extra carbon dioxide boosted overall pine growth by 25 percent
and sweetgum production by 21 percent, according to the Science report.
However, carbon tracer measurements revealed that the fine roots
of the trees at the Duke site lasted significantly longer than
plant biologists had previously estimated, implying that they are
replaced less often and carbon transfer to soil is slow. The fine
roots in the Oak Ridge site, however, have a shorter life, and
much more of the extra carbon is transferred faster to the soil.
The carbon tracer approach used in the study gives scientists
a more accurate way to estimate replacement of roots because it
documents how long the carbon actually resides in root tissue.
The fact that growing roots are so hard to study without killing
them or disturbing their growth has led scientists to overestimate
how much carbon from extra doses of carbon dioxide might end up
in the soil.
The analysis revealed that the pines showed a root carbon turnover
of 4.2 years, and the sweetgums showed a carbon turnover of 1.25
years. Plant biologists had previously estimated that such roots
would be replaced once every year on average. Based on this analysis,
the larger roots would last even longer, said the scientists. Other
carbon tracer studies confirmed that the long root turnover rates
are changed by carbon dioxide levels.
"These long root lifetimes suggest that root production and turnover
in forests have been overestimated and that sequestration of anthropogenic
(human-produced) atmospheric carbon in forest soils may be lower
than currently estimated," wrote the paper's authors.
Other authors are Richard Norby of Oak Ridge National Laboratory
and Julie Jastrow of Argonne National Laboratory.
The nations first national laboratory, Argonne National
Laboratory conducts basic and applied scientific research across
a wide spectrum of disciplines, ranging from high-energy physics
to climatology and biotechnology. Since 1990, Argonne has worked
with more than 600 companies and numerous federal agencies and
other organizations to help advance America's scientific leadership
and prepare the nation for the future. Argonne is operated by the University
of Chicago for the U.S. Department
of Energy's Office of Science.
For more information, please contact Catherine Foster (630/252-5580
or media@anl.gov) at Argonne.
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