Global warming predictions may be overestimated
November 20th, 2008 - 3:51 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, Nov 20 (ANI): A detailed analysis of black carbon, in computer climate models, has suggested that those models may be overestimating global warming predictions.
Savanna fires occur almost every year in northern Australia, leaving behind black carbon, which is the residue of burned organic matter that remains in soil for thousands of years.
A new study, by researchers at Cornell University, quantified the amount of black carbon in Australian soils and found that there was far more than expected, according to Johannes Lehmann, a Cornell professor of biogeochemistry.
As a result of global warming, soils are expected to release more carbon dioxide, the major greenhouse gas, into the atmosphere, which, in turn, creates more warming.
Climate models try to incorporate these increases of carbon dioxide from soils as the planet warms, but results vary greatly when realistic estimates of black carbon in soils are included in the predictions, the study found.
Soils include many forms of carbon, including organic carbon from leaf litter and vegetation and black carbon from the burning of organic matter.
It takes a few years for organic carbon to decompose, as microbes eat it and convert it to carbon dioxide.
But, black carbon can take 1,000-2,000 years, on average, to convert to carbon dioxide.
By entering realistic estimates of stocks of black carbon in soil from two Australian savannas into a computer model that calculates carbon dioxide release from soil, the researchers found that carbon dioxide emissions from soils were reduced by about 20 percent over 100 years, as compared with simulations that did not take black carbon’’s long shelf life into account.
The findings are significant because soils are by far the worlds largest source of carbon dioxide, producing 10 times more carbon dioxide each year than all the carbon dioxide emissions from human activities combined.
Small changes in how carbon emissions from soils are estimated, therefore, can have a large impact.
The study quantified the amount of black carbon in 452 Australian soils across two savannas. Black carbon content varied widely, between zero and more than 80 percent, in soils across Australia.
We know from measurements that climate change today is worse than people have predicted, said Lehmann. But this particular aspect, black carbons stability in soil, if incorporated in climate models, would actually decrease climate predictions, he added. (ANI)
- Abrupt thaw in permafrost heightens climatic threat - Dec 04, 2011
- Microbes aren't accelerating global warming as expected - Apr 27, 2010
- Tropical forest growth could worsen carbon dioxide problem - Aug 16, 2011
- CO2 emission needs to be curbed to limit ocean acidification: Experts - Aug 21, 2010
- New CO2 model to ensure that Earth doesn't heat up beyond two degrees - Aug 03, 2010
- Tree plantation may not fight global warming - May 26, 2011
- Soil may release less CO2 than expected due to global warming - Nov 18, 2008
- Small farmers hold big key to solving global warming - Dec 07, 2010
- Dust in Earth's atmosphere has doubled since the beginning of 20th century - Jan 09, 2011
- 66pc permafrost to melt by 2200, speed up global warming in coming years - Feb 17, 2011
- Earth will recover faster from global warming show prehistoric evidence - Apr 23, 2011
- Scrubbing CO2 from air could be a long-term commitment - Jul 02, 2010
- Two thirds of permafrost likely to melt by 2200 - Feb 17, 2011
- Geoscientists call for reducing soot emissions - Jun 26, 2010
- Climate change to precipitate Antarctic ice sheet collapse - Jan 10, 2011
Tags: australian soils, biogeochemistry, black carbon, carbon dioxide emissions, carbon dioxide release, carbon emissions, computer climate models, computer model, cornell professor, cornell university, greenhouse gas, leaf litter, microbes, northern australia, organic carbon, organic matter, realistic estimates, savannas, shelf life, small changes