Do urban ‘green’ spaces contribute to global warming?
January 20th, 2010 - 3:20 pm ICT by IANSWashington, Jan 20 (IANS) There is some disquieting news about urban green spaces, which instead of mitigating global warming, might actually contribute to it, says a new study.
Turfgrass lawns help remove carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air through photosynthesis and store it as organic carbon in soil, making them important “carbon sinks”.
However, greenhouse emissions from fertiliser output, mowing and other lawn management practices are four times greater than the amount of carbon stored by ornamental grass in parks, a University of California-Irvine (UC-I) study shows.
These emissions include nitrous oxide released from soil after fertilisation. Nitrous oxide is a greenhouse gas that’s 300 times more powerful than CO2, the earth’s most problematic climate warmer.
“Lawns look great - they’re nice and green and healthy, and they’re photosynthesising a lot of organic carbon,” said Amy Townsend-Small, UC-I post doctoral researcher in earth system science, who led the study.
“But the carbon-storing benefits of lawns are counteracted by fuel consumption,” said Townsend. The research results are important to greenhouse gas legislation being negotiated, said a UC-I release.
“We need this kind of carbon accounting to help reduce global warming,” Townsend said. “The current trend is to count the carbon sinks and forget about the greenhouse gas emissions, but it clearly isn’t enough.”
These findings are slated for publication in Geophysical Research Letters.
Related Stories
- Urban green spaces may actually contribute to global warming - Jan 20, 2010
- Intensive land management ruins Europe's carbon sinks - Nov 28, 2009
- "Supervillain" CO2 has "henchmen" like NO2 and methane to amplify global warming - Sep 09, 2009
- Arctic lands and oceans account for 25 percent of world's net sink of CO2 - Oct 15, 2009
- Aquatic "dead zones" increasing global warming - Mar 12, 2010
- Arctic area, oceans lock up fourth of world's carbon dioxide - Oct 15, 2009
- Use of ancient techniques may help reverse global warming - Dec 07, 2008
- Glacier retreat in Antarctic opens up new carbon sink - Nov 10, 2009
- Carbon dioxide emissions up by 29 percent: Report - Nov 21, 2009
- Businesses To Report Emission Of Greenhouse Gases, Including Sulfur Hexafluoride - Dec 26, 2009
- Manure major contributor to rising nitrous oxide levels in atmosphere - Aug 31, 2009
- Cities trap more CO2 than rain forests - Sep 09, 2009
- New power plant can provide electricity with zero CO2 emissions - Dec 04, 2009
- Use charcoal to fight global warming - Jan 14, 2010
- Nuclear energy may help cut greenhouse gas emissions - Dec 09, 2009
- Sci-Tech
- carbon dioxide
- co2
- doctoral researcher
- earth system science
- fuel consumption
- gas legislation
- geophysical research letters
- global warming
- greenhouse emissions
- greenhouse gas emissions
- lawn management
- lawns
- management practices
- organic carbon
- ornamental grass
- photosynthesis
- s 300
- soil
- university of california
- university of california irvine
Posted in Sci-Tech, |








January 21st, 2010 at 12:40 am
Old news repeated.
A tree does a better job than a bush, and a mono-culture of anything does less than a biodiverse area of the same size.
Greenspace would best be described as an area where no man-made changes are made.
If you do selective timbering to keep the forest healthy then you are doing the most you should do, anything more will reduce the carbon sequestration.
I replaced my lawn with a forest and pond. No cutting, just good old darwinian evolution.