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Friday, July 25, 2008

Tropical Trees Cool Earth Most Effectively

Tropical Trees Cool Earth Most Effectively
A new study finds that tropical trees are better at combating global warming than trees in higher latitudes.
"Our study shows that only tropical rainforests are strongly beneficial in helping slow down global warming," said study team leader Govindasamy Bala of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.
Forests affect the climate in three different ways:

1) By absorbing carbon dioxide (a major greenhouse gas) to help cool the planet;
2) By evaporating water which forms clouds, helping to keep the planet cooler;
3) By absorbing sunlight with their dark leaves. This warms the Earth.

Trees in snowy places absorb sunlight that would otherwise be reflected back to space by the bright white snow.
However, tropical rainforests trap larger amounts of carbon dioxide and evaporate more water to produce clouds that reflect sunlight back to space.
"Tropical forests are like Earth's air conditioner," said Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Bala's colleague.
By simulating the effects of deforestation in different parts of the world, the study, published in the April 9 online issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that deforestation in the tropics is more destructive to Earth's climate than deforestation in higher latitudes, and that trees in mid- to high-latitudes could actually cause warming.
The scientists warn that these findings don't mean it's time to take out the axes and cut down all the trees outside of the tropics.
"A primary reason we are trying to slow global warming is to protect nature," Caldeira said. "It just makes no sense to destroy natural ecosystems in the name of saving natural ecosystems."


Source from: http://www.livescience.com/environment/070409_deforest_cooling.html


By Cesca On

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