Co-authors of the Science paper, Paul Steele (foreground, left), Roger Francey (background, centre) and Ray Langenfelds (foreground, right), at work in CSIRO's Global Atmospheric Sampling Laboratory (GASLAB) in Melbourne.
Study shows Tropics absorbing Northern emissions
Reference: 07/114
An international research team, including three CSIRO scientists, has thrown new light on the way that carbon dioxide produced by industrial activities in the northern hemisphere is absorbed by vegetation across the globe, particularly in tropical regions.
- 22 June 2007
The research, published today in the journal Science, shows that plants in the mid- to high-latitudes of the northern hemisphere play a smaller role in the uptake of industrial carbon dioxide emissions, and that tropical plants play a larger role in that uptake, than previously thought.
According to Dr Paul Steele, from CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research in Melbourne, the research is different from earlier studies because it uses most of the available data on the vertical distribution of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
“The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere isn’t uniform – it varies spatially and temporally throughout the whole depth of the atmosphere,” says Dr Steele.
“When the vertical gradients from a range of different locations were properly included in model simulations, the carbon budget required a weaker uptake of carbon dioxide by land plants in northern temperate latitudes, and a weaker emission of carbon dioxide by plants in the tropics.”
Dr Steele explains that previous model studies have almost exclusively used time series of carbon dioxide measurements from only two dimensions of the atmosphere, latitude and longitude, near to the Earth’s surface. “By using the time series of measurements of the vertical distribution of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere at 12 sites around the world, we have arrived at this new result,” he says.
One of the 12 sites is near Cape Grim, on the northwest tip of Tasmania, where a light aircraft was used to collect air samples from near the surface to high in the troposphere about once a month from 1991 to 2000.
The Cape Grim station, managed by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, monitors and studies global atmospheric composition in a program led by CSIRO and the Bureau.
Given the large carbon dioxide emissions caused by land clearing in the tropics, the research strongly implies that tropical ecosystems are showing strong uptake of carbon dioxide.
The result will improve estimates of global carbon cycling, including the fate of carbon emissions from human activity, which will be important for understanding and mitigating climate change.
The paper, Weak northern and strong tropical land carbon uptake from vertical profiles of atmospheric CO2 by Britton B. Stephens et al., includes three Australian authors, Ray Langenfelds, Paul Steele and Roger Francey, and is published in the 21 June issue of Science.
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Britton B. Stephens, Kevin R. Gurney, Pieter P. Tans, Colm Sweeney, Wouter Peters, Lori Bruhwiler, Philippe Ciais, Michel Ramonet, Philippe Bousquet, Takakiyo Nakazawa, Shuji Aoki, Toshinobu Machida, Gen Inoue, Nikolay Vinnichenko, Jon Lloyd, Armin Jordan, Martin Heimann, Olga Shibistova, Ray L. Langenfelds, L. Paul Steele, Roger J. Francey, and A. Scott Denning Weak Northern and Strong Tropical Land Carbon Uptake from Vertical Profiles of Atmospheric CO2. Science 22 June 2007: 1732-1735.
Fast facts
- The research, published today in the journal Science, shows that plants in the mid- to high-latitudes of the northern hemisphere play a smaller role in the uptake of industrial carbon dioxide emissions, and that tropical plants play a larger role in that uptake, than previously thought
- The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere isn’t uniform – it varies spatially and temporally throughout the whole depth of the atmosphere