Arab Times

Forests won’t fight climate change: Dragon delivers docking port:

Discovery

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North American forests will not fight climate change by absorbing carbon dioxide at levels once hoped for because the trees may not grow big enough, a study said on Wednesday.

The new research challenges previous studies that said trees could grow larger due to higher temperatur­es brought on by global warming, said the authors of the study published in the journal Ecology Letters.

Typically, up to a tharizird of carbon-dioxide emissions from human activity, such as automobile driving or steel production, is absorbed by forests, the study’s authors said. Carbon dioxide is the main greenhouse gas responsibl­e for global warming.

But if temperatur­es get too high, tree growth is inhibited and the absorption rate diminishes, said senior author Margaret Evans, a professor at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

“There is a tipping point,” she said. “A warmer climate becomes a bad thing instead of a good thing.”

Looking ahead at warmer temperatur­es likely in the coming decades, trees in the US southwest north to the Rocky Mountains, Canada and Alaska could grow as much as 75 percent slower than normal by 2075, the researcher­s said.

By 2075, the average temperatur­e in North America could be about 43 degrees Fahrenheit (6 degrees Celsius) higher than it was in 1925, under a worst case scenario, the researcher­s said, using data from the United Nations Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change.

Some increases in tree growth are still likely in the Pacific Northwest, parts of Florida, the northeaste­rn part of Quebec in Canada and its maritime provinces, they said.

The researcher­s from US, Swiss and Polish institutio­ns combined climate projection­s with tree rings collected between 1900 and 1950 at nearly 1,500 sites.

Tree rings, the layers grown each year, provide a record of how trees are affected by changes in temperatur­e and rainfall patterns, they said.

Similar research could be done on northern forests in Europe and Asia, Evans said.

The study is the first to account for how trees respond to climate change, lead author Noah Charney, a researcher at the University of Arizona in Tucson, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. (RTRS) Space X finally made good on its delivery of a space station docking port Wednesday morning.

A Dragon capsule arrived at the Internatio­nal Space Station, bearing more than 2 tons of supplies.

The shipment includes a docking port needed for future rocket ships. Space X is working on a crew-worthy Dragon, while Boeing is developing a capsule for astronauts named Starliner.

Space X launched its latest Dragon from Cape Canaveral on Monday. A year earlier, the first of these new docking rings was destroyed in a Space X launch accident. NASA and Boeing — which makes the ports — is working on a replacemen­t that should fly in another 1 years.

The two US space station residents used a robot arm for Wednesday’s 250-mile-high operation above America’s Great Lakes.

“We’ve captured us a Dragon,” reported astronaut Jeffrey Williams. “We look forward to the work that it brings.”

Mission Control replied, “This event is an important step on the journey of the Internatio­nal Space Station mission. Now let’s get this vehicle berthed so we can get to work.” (AP)

 ??  ?? A picture taken on July 18, shows US astronaut Jeanette Epps taking part in a water landing simulation during her preflight training outside Moscow. Jeanette Epps is scheduled to blast off to the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS) from the Russian...
A picture taken on July 18, shows US astronaut Jeanette Epps taking part in a water landing simulation during her preflight training outside Moscow. Jeanette Epps is scheduled to blast off to the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS) from the Russian...
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Evans
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Williams

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