Forests have a limited capacity to soak up
atmospheric1 carbon dioxide, according to a new study from Northern Arizona University. The study, available online in the journal New Phytologist, aimed to explore how rising atmospheric carbon dioxide could alter the carbon and nitrogen content of
ecosystems3.
By performing tests on subtropical woodland plots over an 11-year period, the researchers found that
ecosystem2 carbon uptake was not significantly increased by the high CO2 treatment—in contrast to expectations. While plants did contain more carbon when CO2 levels were increased, soil actually lost carbon due to microbial
decomposition(分解,腐烂); both factors
essentially4 balanced one another out.
"Nature cannot 'self-correct'
entirely5 against climate change, and the scientific community has been both
overestimating6 the impact of plants and underestimating the impact of soil microorganisms in how they absorb CO2 and ultimately impact global warming," said Bruce Hungate, director of the Center for Ecosystem Science and Society at NAU and lead author on the study.
"Models of land ecosystems need to be revised to represent microbial responses explicitly," Hungate said. "They're the carbon balance '
trump7 card,' reversing the effect of plants on total carbon storage."
According to Hungate, the tests confirmed that although soil microorganisms are
microscopic8, they are just as important as plants in determining carbon storage by ecosystems.
In addition, the study results indicate that widely accepted carbon cycle models
overestimate9 the role of ecosystems in absorbing carbon from the atmosphere because the models do not represent the responses of soil microorganisms correctly.
Funding for the study was provided by the U.S. Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation, NASA and the Smithsonian Institution.