. Earth Science News .




.
CLIMATE SCIENCE
A new leaf turns in carbon science
by Staff Writers
Canberra, Australia (SPX) Oct 11, 2011

Understanding the exchange of gases, including CO2 and water vapour is especially significant to science because of its relevance to global management of carbon emissions. Image credit - Willen van Aken, CSIRO.

In a paper published in Nature, a team of US, Dutch and Australian scientists have estimated that the global rate of photosynthesis, the chemical process governing the way ocean and land plants absorb and release CO2, occurs 25% faster than previously thought.

From analysing more than 30 years of data collected by Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego including air samples collected and analysed by CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology from the Cape Grim Air Pollution Monitoring Station, scientists have deduced the mean rate of photosynthesis over several decades and identified the El Nino-Southern Oscillation phenomenon as a regulator of the type of oxygen atoms found in CO2 from the far north to the south pole.

"Our analysis suggests that current estimates of global primary production are too low and the refinements we propose represent a new benchmark for models to simulate carbon cycling through plants," says co-author, Dr Colin Allison, an atmospheric chemist at CSIRO's Aspendale laboratories.

The study, led by Dr Lisa Welp from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, California, traced the path of oxygen atoms in CO2 molecules, which tells researchers how long the CO2 has been in the atmosphere and how fast it had passed through plants. From this, they estimated that the global rate of photosynthesis is about 25 percent faster than previously thought.

"It's difficult to measure the rate of photosynthesis for forests, let alone the entire globe. For a single leaf it's straightforward, you just put it in an instrument chamber and measure the CO2 decreasing in the chamber air," said Dr Welp.

"But you cannot do that for an entire forest. What we have done is to use a naturally occurring marker, an oxygen isotope, in atmospheric CO2 that allows us to track how often it ended up inside a plant leaf, and from oxygen isotopic CO2 data collected around the world we can estimate the mean global rate of photosynthesis over the last few decades."

In other studies, analysis of water and oxygen components found in ocean sediments and ice cores have provided scientists with a 'big picture' insight into carbon cycling over millions of years, but the search for the finer details of exchanges or uptake through ocean algae and terrestrial plant leaves has been out of reach.

The authors said that their new estimate of the rate of global photosynthesis will help guide other estimates of plant activity, such as the capacity of forests and crops to grow and fix carbon, and help re-define how scientists measure and model the cycling of CO2 between the atmosphere and plants on land and in the ocean.

Dr Allison said understanding the exchange of gases, including CO2 and water vapour, in the biosphere - oceans, land and atmosphere - is especially significant to climate science, and to policymakers, because of its relevance to global management of carbon emissions.

"Quantifying this global production, centred on the exchange of growth-promoting CO2 and water vapour, has been historically difficult because there are no direct measurements at scales greater than leaf levels.

"Inferences drawn from atmospheric measurements provide an estimate of ecosystem exchanges and satellite-based observations can be used to estimate overall primary production, but as a result of this new research we have re-defined the rate of biospheric carbon exchange between atmosphere, land and ocean.

"These results can be used to validate the biospheric components included in carbon cycle models and, although still tentative, may be useful in predicting future climate change," Dr Allison said.

CSIRO's Dr Roger Francey was a co-author on the project, led by Scripps' Drs Welp and Ralph Keeling. Other co-authors of the study are Harro Meijer from the University of Groningen in the Netherlands; Alane Bollenbacher, Stephen Piper and Martin Wahlen from Scripps; and Kei Yoshimura from the University of Tokyo, Japan.

Dr Allison said a critical element of the research was access to long data sets at multiple locations, such as Cape Grim, Mauna Loa and South Pole, extending back to 1977 when Cape Grim was established in Tasmania's north-west, together with more recent samples from facilities such as Christmas Island, Samoa, California and Alaska.

The Cape Grim Baseline Air Pollution Station provides vital information about changes to the atmospheric composition of the Southern Hemisphere.

The Cape Grim Baseline Air Pollution Station, funded and managed by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, detects atmospheric changes as part of a scientific research program jointly supervised by CSIRO's Marine and Atmospheric Research Division and the Bureau.

Related Links
Climate Change at CSIRO
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



CLIMATE SCIENCE
The Climate Change Debate: Man Versus Nature
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Oct 11, 2011
The public discussion on climate change has become so polarized that some scientists don't even acknowledge there is a debate. Climate scientist at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, Gavin Schmidt, is one of those people. "There aren't 'two sides' to the science, nor to the policy response," Schmidt said. "This implies that the whole thing is just a matter of an opinion - it is no ... read more


CLIMATE SCIENCE
Japan offers 10,000 free trips to foreigners: report

Twelve dead in China construction site accident

Japan's Ongoing Nuclear Disaster: Radiation Still Leaking, Recovery Still Years Away

Japan starts thyroid tests for Fukushima children

CLIMATE SCIENCE
BlackBerry glitches continue for second day

Bangladesh launches $130 laptop for schools

Boeing and Lion Air Pioneer Precision Satellite Navigation Technology

S. Korea's LG unveils ultra-high-speed smartphone

CLIMATE SCIENCE
'Iron' fist proposed for Miami's giant snail problem

Chilean giant dam row enters Supreme Court

Myanmar seeks to ease Beijing worries over dam

Reefs recovered faster after mass extinction than first thought

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Rising CO2 levels at end of Ice Age not tied to Pacific Ocean

Rising carbon dioxide levels at end of last ice age not tied to Pacific Ocean

Swiss warn of massive ice chunk breaking off glacier

Chinese target Arctic with Iceland land deal: experts

CLIMATE SCIENCE
The establishment of genetically engineered canola populations in the US

Rethinking connection between soil as a carbon reservoir and global warming

China says 100 mln farmers to move to cities by 2020

Fungus could wipe out Philippine bananas: growers

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Underwater eruption prompts evacuation in Canaries

Hurricane targets Mexico on eve of Pan American games

Thailand beefs up airport flood defences

A 3D Look at Philippe Provided Clues of Transition into a Hurricane

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Food crisis looming in Sudan: UN agency

Kenya tries to contact French woman's abductors in Somalia

Berkeley Lab Tests Cookstoves for Haiti

Guyana opposition warns foreign bauxite firms

CLIMATE SCIENCE
In the brain, winning is everywhere

Alzheimer's might be transmissible in similar way as infectious prion diseases

Keeping track of reality

Merkel, rights groups hail Nobel nod to women


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement