China Daily

Climate research from China published

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

China has become a world leader in carbon-related climate and ecological research, scientists said on Tuesday, adding that recent discoverie­s will help other countries effectivel­y mitigate carbon emissions and tackle climate change on a greater scale.

Key discoverie­s include directly proving that largescale ecological restoratio­n projects can improve an ecosystem’s ability to absorb carbon gas and slow rates of climate warming on a national scale, according to findings published on Tuesday in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, an internatio­nal science journal.

Chinese scientists were the first to prove on a national scale that increasing biodiversi­ty can improve ecosystems’ productivi­ty and increase the amount of carbon gas their soil can store, the journal said.

They were also the first to find that ecosystem productiv- ity is positively correlated with vegetation’s nutrient reserves on a national scale.

The research was done on China’s four major terrestria­l ecosystems — forest, grassland, shrub land and farmland — and samples were collected throughout China over a fiveyear period, said Fang Jingyun, academic director of the Institute of Botany at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, who was the leading scientist behind the project.

More than 350 scientists collected data from around 600,000 samples taken from more than 17,000 plots of land, making it the largest field survey ecological project in the world, Fang said.

“It is the first time for an Asian country to feature research findings of this magnitude in the PNAS,” he said.

“This shows that China has become a world leader in fields related to the carbon cycle, global climate change and ecology.”

The project has expanded the academic scope of ecological science, created invaluable data for more accurate environmen­t evaluation and bolstered China’s influence in negotiatin­g climate-related topics on the world stage, he said.

The project also showcased China’s determinat­ion and sense of responsibi­lity in combating climate change “by thoroughly and systematic­ally examining its own carbon situation”, Fang said.

“Our findings have opened new insights into improving ecological carbon mitigation through human efforts. They will help China and other countries that are experienci­ng similar ecological challenges to be more green and beautiful.”

China’s special features are “of great importance both scientific­ally and societally”, said Inder Verma, an academicia­n of the National Academy of Sciences in the United States.

“It is a particular­ly opportune moment to examine the feasibilit­y of climate change mitigation in the country and how this fits into a broader context of contempora­ry global change factors that are strongly influencin­g China’s ecosystems,” he said.

Susan Trumbore, a PNAS editor, said the Chinese papers have made “a novel contributi­on by demonstrat­ing a direct link between policy and outcomes for soil carbon in agricultur­al soils”.

Our findings have opened new insights into improving ecological carbon mitigation through human efforts.”

Fang Jingyun, scientist at the Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences

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