Hurricanes and typhoons help to remove CO2 from the atmosphere
October 22nd, 2008 - 2:13 pm ICT by ANI - Send to a friend:Washington, Oct 22 (ANI): A new research by scientists has determined that hurricanes and typhoons, which are normally seen as looming threats from global warming, are actually helping to remove carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere.
According to a report in Discovery News, the research was done by Robert Hilton of the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom and a team of researchers.
Each year humans emit approximately 7.2 billion tons of the greenhouse gas, trapping vast amounts of heat in the air and oceans.
Tropical cyclones derive their energy from warm seas, and some scientists believe global warming will spawn more frequent and more intense storms unless drastic effort is undertaken to cut emissions.
But, Robert Hilton a team of researchers found that when two powerful storms lashed Taiwan in 2004, rains eroded thousands of tons of carbon-rich plant matter and soil.
The material was sent coursing out of the islands steep mountain range down the LiWu River and into the deep sea, where it was buried in sediment.
Over the last 30 years large storms, which only last a few days, dominated the erosion there, Hilton said. Between 77 and 92 percent of carbon was eroded by these storms, he added.
Hilton and colleagues calculated that Typhoon Mindulle, the stronger of the 2004 storms, washed about 5,500 tons of carbon down the LiWu River.
When a steep river like the LiWu comes roaring out of the mountains at flood stage, its waters are dense with sediment and they quickly descend to the sea floor, where up to 90 percent of the carbon can be buried and removed from Earths carbon cycle.
So-called steepland rivers are prevalent in the tropics throughout the western Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, making the region ripe for erosion by tropical cyclones.
In the Pacific alone, some 50-90 million tons of carbon are sequestered in this way annually.
According to Basil Gomez of Indiana State University, This is a cool study that suggests erosion may not be as big a worry for carbon in some areas as we once thought it was. (ANI)
Related Stories
- Typhoons bury a massive amount of carbon in the oceans - July 25, 2008
- Nutrients from Amazon River drive carbon capture in the deep tropical ocean - July 22, 2008
- Strength of tropical storms has increased: study - September 4, 2008
- Rising levels of CO2 set to increase dead zones in tropical oceans - November 15, 2008
- Tropical wetlands hold more carbon than temperate zones - October 9, 2008
- Global warming may be contributing to stronger hurricanes - September 4, 2008
- Rivers contribute much more to global carbon cycling than previously believed (Re-Issue) - February 11, 2008
- Carbon processing in rivers is a bigger component of global carbon cycling than previously believed - February 10, 2008
- Monsoon variation influenced evolution of the Himalayas - November 10, 2008
- Warmer oceans can fuel more thunderstorms - December 25, 2008
- Tropical Storm Marie forms as a new threat - October 2, 2008
- Hurricane Ikes massive sprawl one of meteorologys tough nuts to crack - September 13, 2008
- Hurricane Ikes massive sprawl one of meteorologys tough nuts to crack (Re-Issue) - September 14, 2008
- How global warming will become more dangerous! - November 25, 2008
- One-third of nitrogen entering worlds oceans from atmosphere is man-made - May 16, 2008
- National
- atlantic oceans
- basil gomez
- carbon cycle
- discovery news
- flood stage
- greenhouse gas
- hurricanes and typhoons
- indiana state university
- intense storms
- plant matter
- powerful storms
- robert hilton
- sea floor
- sediment
- steep mountain range
- steep river
- tropical cyclones
- typhoon mindulle
- university of cambridge
- warm seas
Posted in National, |

