Combining two tools could increase understanding of carbon dioxide uptake by plants

How much carbon dioxide, a pivotal greenhouse gas behind global warming, is absorbed by plants on land? It's a deceptively complicated question, so a Rutgers-led group of scientists recommends combining two cutting-edge tools to help answer the crucial climate change-related question.

"We need to understand how the Earth is breathing now to know how resilient it will be to future change," according to a paper in the journal Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. The early online version was published in April 2020 and the final online version in September 2020.

Global observations suggest that natural ecosystems take up about as much carbon dioxide as they emit. Measuring how much carbon dioxide is absorbed by plants on land is complicated by the carbon exhaled simultaneously by plants and soils, the paper notes.

While plants absorb a portion of the increasing emissions of carbon dioxide from fossil fuel burning, scientists have a difficult time determining how much, said lead author Mary Whelan, an assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Sciences in the at Rutgers University-New Brunswick .

By combining two tools that correspond to potential carbon uptake and light captured by leaves, we'll know how much carbon dioxide could remain in the atmosphere. The two communities of scientists who use these tools need to come together, with the help of funding."

Mary Whelan, Study Lead Author and Assistant Professor, Department of Environmental Sciences, Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The tools focus on two indicators of photosynthesis, when plants harness sunlight to turn carbon dioxide and water into carbohydrates, generating oxygen. One indicator is carbonyl sulfide, a natural trace gas absorbed by plants. The second, called solar-induced fluorescence, is light emitted by leaves during photosynthesis.

Combining the two tools will help reveal how much carbon is being absorbed by ecosystems and the consequences for the water cycle. Collecting data via satellites, in the air and on the ground will help improve models to predict changes in the future, according to the paper.

Source:
Journal reference:

Whelan, M. E.,  et al. (2020) Scientific Communities Striving for a Common Cause: Innovations in Carbon Cycle Science. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-19-0306.1.

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