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Sci/Tech Global
Garden Grows Greener By Goddard Space Flight Center Jun 11,
2003, 07:53
A NASA-Department of Energy jointly funded study concludes the Earth
has been greening over the past 20 years. As climate changed, plants found
it easier to grow.
The globally comprehensive, multi-discipline
study appears in this week's Science magazine. The article states climate
changes have provided extra doses of water, heat and sunlight in areas
where one or more of those ingredients may have been lacking. Plants
flourished in places where climatic conditions previously limited growth.
"Our study proposes climatic changes as the leading cause for the
increases in plant growth over the last two decades, with lesser
contribution from carbon dioxide fertilization and forest re-growth," said
Ramakrishna Nemani, the study's lead author from the University of
Montana, Missoula, Mont.
From 1980 to 2000, changes to the global
environment have included two of the warmest decades in the instrumental
record; three intense El Ni駉 events in 1982-83, 1987-88 and 1997-98;
changes in tropical cloudiness and monsoon dynamics; and a 9.3 percent
increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), which in turn affects
man-made influences on climate. All these changes impact plant
growth.
Earlier studies by Ranga Myneni, Boston University (BU),
and Compton Tucker, NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC), Greenbelt,
Md., also co-authors of the study, reported increased growing seasons and
woody biomass in northern high-latitude forests.
Another co-author,
Charles Keeling, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, Calif.,
cautions no one knows whether these positive impacts are due to short-term
climate cycles, or longer-term global climate changes. Also, a 36 percent
increase in global population, from 4.45 billion in 1980 to 6.08 billion
in 2000, overshadows the increases in plant growth.
Nemani and
colleagues constructed a global map of the Net Primary Production (NPP) of
plants from climate and satellite data of vegetation greenness and solar
radiation absorption. NPP is the difference between the CO2 absorbed by
plants during photosynthesis, and CO2 lost by plants during respiration.
NPP is the foundation for food, fiber and fuel derived from plants,
without which life on Earth could not exist. Humans appropriate
approximately 50 percent of global NPP.
NPP globally increased on
average by six percent from 1982 to 1999. Ecosystems in tropical zones and
in the high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere accounted for 80 percent
of the increase. NPP increased significantly over 25 percent of the global
vegetated area, but decreased over seven percent of the area; illustrating
how plants respond differently depending on regional climatic
conditions.
Climatic changes, over approximately the past 20 years,
tended to be in the direction of easing climatic limits to plant growth.
In general, in areas where temperatures restricted plant growth, it became
warmer; where sunlight was needed, clouds dissipated; and where it was too
dry, it rained more. In the Amazon, plant growth was limited by sun
blocking cloud cover, but the skies have become less cloudy. In India,
where a billion people depend on rain, the monsoon was more dependable in
the 1990s than in the 1980s.
The climate data for NPP calculations
came from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
National Center for Environmental Prediction. Researchers used two
independently derived 18-plus-year satellite datasets from the Advanced
Very High Resolution Radiometers on NOAA satellite. The team processed and
improved the data at GSFC and BU.
"Systematic observation of
global vegetation is being continued by NASA's Earth observing satellites.
Earth observing satellites are paving the way to find out if these
biospheric responses are going to hold for the future," adds Steve
Running, another co-author from the University of Montana.
NASA's
Earth Science Enterprise is committed to studying the primary causes of
the Earth system variability, including both natural and human-induced
causes.
Source: Goddard Space Flight Center
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