by Oak Ridge National Laboratory
October 26, 2024
from
SciTechDaily Website
Scientists have found that plants
absorb
31% more carbon
dioxide than previously estimated,
improving
climate predictions and highlighting
the importance
of natural carbon sinks.
The new
estimate of global photosynthesis, or GPP,
is based on
tracking carbonyl sulfide,
which better
reflects CO2 uptake by plants.
Credit:
SciTechDaily.com
Scientists were Wrong:
Plants Absorb 31% More CO2
than Previously Thought...
New research shows plants absorb 31% more CO2 than
previously estimated, raising the global GPP to 157 petagrams per
year.
Using carbonyl sulfide as a proxy for
photosynthesis, this study highlights tropical rainforests' critical
role as carbon sinks and stresses the importance of accurate
photosynthesis modeling for climate predictions.
A new assessment by scientists reveals that plants worldwide are
absorbing about 31% more carbon dioxide than previously believed.
Published in the journal Nature, this
research is expected to enhance Earth system models used to forecast
climate trends and underscores the critical role of natural carbon
sequestration in mitigating greenhouse gas emissions.
The amount of
CO2
removed from the atmosphere via photosynthesis from land plants is
known as Terrestrial Gross Primary Production, or
GPP.
It represents the largest carbon exchange between
land and atmosphere on the planet.
GPP is typically cited in petagrams of carbon
per year.
One petagram equals 1 billion metric
tons, which is roughly the amount of CO2 emitted each
year from 238 million gas-powered passenger vehicles.
Improved Estimates Using New
Models
A team of scientists led by Cornell University, with support from
the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory,
used new models and measurements to assess GPP from the land at 157
petagrams of carbon per year, up from an estimate of 120 petagrams
established 40 years ago and currently used in most estimates of
Earth's carbon cycle.
Researchers developed an integrated model that traces the movement
of the chemical compound carbonyl sulfide, or
OCS, from the air into leaf
chloroplasts, the factories inside plant cells that carry out
photosynthesis.
The research team quantified photosynthetic
activity by tracking OCS.
The compound largely follows the same path
through a leaf as CO2, is closely related to
photosynthesis, and is easier to track and measure than CO2
diffusion.
For these reasons, OCS has been used as a
photosynthesis proxy at the plant and leaf levels.
This study showed that OCS is well suited to
estimate photosynthesis at large scales and over long periods of
time, making it a reliable indicator of worldwide GPP.
NGEE Tropics Observation Platform.
An observation tower overlooks a
Panamanian
rainforest where scientists from ORNL
and other
partners are working on the
DOE Next
Generation
Ecosystem
Experiments Tropics project,
gathering
ground measurements that are used
to analyze
tropical forest carbon cycling.
Credit: Jeffrey
Warren/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy
The team used plant data from a variety of sources to inform model
development.
One of the sources was the
LeafWeb database, established
at
ORNL in support of the DOE
Terrestrial Ecosystem Science Scientific Focus Area, or
TES-SFA.
LeafWeb collects data about photosynthetic traits
from scientists around the world to support carbon cycle modeling.
The scientists verified the model results by
comparing them with high-resolution data from environmental
monitoring towers instead of satellite observations, which can be
hindered by clouds, particularly in the tropics.
Key to the new estimate is a better representation of a process
called mesophyll diffusion:
how OCS and CO2 move from leaves
into chloroplasts where carbon fixation occurs.
Understanding mesophyll diffusion is
essential to figuring out how efficiently plants are conducting
photosynthesis, and even how they might adapt to changing
environments.
The Importance of Mesophyll
Conductance
Lianhong Gu, co-author, photosynthesis expert, and
distinguished staff scientist in ORNL's Environmental Sciences
Division, helped develop the project's mesophyll conductance
model, which represents numerically the diffusion of OCS in
leaves, as well as the linkage between OCS diffusion and
photosynthesis.
"Figuring out how much CO2 plants
fix each year is a conundrum that scientists have been working
on for a while," Gu said.
"The original estimate of 120 petagrams per
year was established in the 1980s, and it stuck as we tried to
figure out a new approach.
It's important that we get a good handle on
global GPP since that initial land carbon uptake affects the
rest of our representations of Earth's carbon cycle."
"We have to make sure the fundamental processes in the carbon
cycle are properly represented in our larger-scale models," Gu
added.
"For those Earth-scale simulations to work
well, they need to represent the best understanding of the
processes at work.
This work represents a major step forward in
terms of providing a definitive number."
Implications for Tropical
Rainforests and Future Climate Predictions
Pan-tropical rainforests accounted for the biggest difference
between previous estimates and the new figures, a finding that was
corroborated by ground measurements, Gu said.
The discovery suggests that rainforests are a
more important natural carbon sink than previously estimated using
satellite data.
Understanding how much carbon can be stored in land ecosystems,
especially in forests with their large accumulations of biomass in
wood, is essential to making predictions of future climate change.
"Nailing down our estimates of GPP with
reliable global-scale observations is a critical step in
improving our predictions of future CO2 in the
atmosphere, and the consequences for global climate," said
Peter Thornton, Corporate Fellow and lead for the Earth
Systems Science Section at ORNL.
The results of this study point to the importance
of including key processes, such as mesophyll conductance, in
model representations of photosynthesis.
DOE's
Next Generation Ecosystem Experiments Tropics
has the goal of advancing model predictions of tropical forest
carbon cycle response to climate change.
These results can inform new model development
that will reduce uncertainty in predictions of tropical forest GPP.
Video
Reference
"Terrestrial
photosynthesis inferred from plant carbonyl sulfide uptake"
by Jiameng Lai, Linda M. J. Kooijmans, Wu Sun, Danica
Lombardozzi, J. Elliott Campbell, Lianhong Gu, Yiqi Luo, Le Kuai
and Ying Sun, 16 October 2024, Nature.
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08050-3
In addition to Cornell's School of
Integrative Plant Sciences, other collaborators on the project
were Wageningen University and Research of The Netherlands,
Carnegie Institution for Sciences, Colorado State University,
University of California Santa Cruz, and the NASA Jet Propulsion
Laboratory.
Support came from Cornell, the National Science Foundation, and
the ORNL TES-SFA, sponsored by DOE's Office of Science
Biological and Environmental Research program.
|