Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Climate experiment rejects idea of greener Earth

Additional heat, carbon dioxide, no help to plants

-

LOS ANGELES — In the course of a 17-year experiment on more than 1 million plants, scientists put future global warming to a real world test — growing California flowers and grasslands with extra heat, carbon dioxide and nitrogen to mimic a notso-distant, hotter future.

The results, simulating a post-2050 world, aren’t pretty. And they contradict those who insist that because plants like carbon dioxide — the main heat-trapping gas spewed by the burning of fossil fuels — climate change isn’t so bad, and will result in a greener Earth.

At least in the California ecosystem, the plants that received extra carbon dioxide, as well as those that got extra warmth, didn’t grow more or get greener. They also didn’t remove the pollution and store more of it in the soil, said study author Chris Field, director of the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environmen­t. Plant growth tended to decline with rising temperatur­es.

“This experiment really puts to bed the idea of a greener hypothesis where ecosystems save us from the implicatio­ns of human-induced climate change,” Field said.

Earlier this year, a team of internatio­nal scientists released a study that looked at Earth from 1982 to 2009 and found it was greening, with a quarter to half the planet producing an increase in the growing season. Field said that earlier study is about trends the planet has already seen but doesn’t say much about the future.

“We were able to use the experiment­al treatments to produce a ‘time machine’ allowing us to look at conditions we might encounter in the second half of the 21st century,” he said.

On ground outside Stanford’s campus, scientists tended 132 different plots of flowers and grass, each with thousands of plants on them. Some of them got 275 extra parts per million of carbon dioxide in addition to what is already in the air, which was about 370 parts per million when the experiment started and is now more than 400. Others got an additional 3.6 degrees of heat or more water or more nitrogen.

Only the extra nitrogen — a byproduct of diesel engines and ammonia used as fertilizer — made plants greener.

Field, whose study appears in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, theorizes that there is a limit to how much carbon dioxide plants can use.

Outside scientists praised long-running experiment.

“This study clearly demonstrat­es that as temperatur­es continue to rise due to climate change, grassland ecosystems will likely not be able to tolerate the higher temperatur­es and increased drought stress,” Boston University biologist Richard Primack emailed.

A limitation of the experiment was that it focused on one type of ecosystem. Similar research needs to be done in the Arctic tundra, boreal forests, tropical forests and other ecosystems, Primack said.

It’s not just plants that will suffer in a hotter world. Biologists have warned that about 20 percent of the world’s lizard species could go extinct by 2080 if warming trends continue. In a separate study published in the journal, a team led by Clemson University found that the distributi­on of shade in a lizard’s surroundin­gs matters in preventing overheatin­g. the

 ?? NONA CHIARIELLO STANFORD UNIVERSITY VIA AP ??
NONA CHIARIELLO STANFORD UNIVERSITY VIA AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States