Posted on 06/09/2008 10:27:56 PM PDT by DaveTesla
In praise of CO2
With less heat and less carbon dioxide, the planet could become less hospitable and less green
Lawrence Solomon
Financial Post, Don Mills, Ontario
Saturday, June 07, 2008
Planet Earth is on a roll! GPP is way up. NPP is way up. To the surprise of those who have been bearish on the planet, the data shows global production has been steadily climbing to record levels, ones not seen since these measurements began.
GPP is Gross Primary Production, a measure of the daily output of the global biosphere the amount of new plant matter on land. NPP is Net Primary Production, an annual tally of the globes production. Biomass is booming. The planet is the greenest its been in decades, perhaps in centuries.
Until the 1980s, ecologists had no way to systematically track growth in plant matter in every corner of the Earth the best they could do was analyze small plots of one-tenth of a hectare or less. The notion of continuously tracking global production to discover the true state of the globes biota was not even considered.
Then, in the 1980s, ecologists realized that satellites could track production, and enlisted NASA to collect the data. For the first time, ecologists did not need to rely on rough estimates or anecdotal evidence of the health of the ecology: They could objectively measure the lands output and soon did on a daily basis and down to the last kilometer.
The results surprised Steven Running of the University of Montana and Ramakrishna Nemani of NASA, scientists involved in analyzing the NASA satellite data. They found that over a period of almost two decades, the Earth as a whole became more bountiful by a whopping 6.2%. About 25% of the Earths vegetated landmass almost 110 million square kilometres enjoyed significant increases and only 7% showed significant declines. When the satellite data zooms in, it finds that each square metre of land, on average, now produces almost 500 grams of greenery per year.
Why the increase? Their 2004 study, and other more recent ones, point to the warming of the planet and the presence of CO2, a gas indispensable to plant life. CO2 is natures fertilizer, bathing the biota with its life-giving nutrients. Plants take the carbon from CO2 to bulk themselves up carbon is the building block of life and release the oxygen, which along with the plants, then sustain animal life. As summarized in a report last month, released along with a petition signed by 32,000 U. S. scientists who vouched for the benefits of CO2: Higher CO2 enables plants to grow faster and larger and to live in drier climates. Plants provide food for animals, which are thereby also enhanced. The extent and diversity of plant and animal life have both increased substantially during the past half-century.
Read the rest of this great article here:
http://www.financialpost.com/story.html?id=569586
View the Seastar satellite images Here:
http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a003400/a003451/index.html
Bump
:’) Beware of Trojan Horses.
So what?
Guess you don't get out much.... ;)
‘Seems about right, to me.
Plants breathe in CO2.
Who knew?!
Carbon..
The backbone of biology for all life.
Gaia loves CO2!!!
What will the Gorebots turn to next as the new planetary crisis?
save
CO2 has been used by greenhouses to boost production for some time at twice the atmospheric level. CO2 generators can be purchased from greenhouse mfg’s and suppliers
Some questions: Where is the equilibrium point? Does the minuscule rise in CO2 surpass the point that plants can use it? How much CO2 was in the atmosphere during past warm periods (around 1000 A.D.)? etc.
Here’s what keeps me up at night: /s
Someday the sun is going to explode and consume planet earth in a huge fireball. All life as we know it will cease to exist. I think that we need a global system of taxation to prepare for the time when the earth will cease to exist. I will be willing to administer the funds — they’re kind of like “carbon credits” except that we will call them “earth extinction credits” — everyone must pay into the fund.
I will jet around the globe to fancy conferences ala Albore and talk about how everything around us will one day cease to exist...... in a few billion years.
You said it!
It is absolutely criminal that we cannot exploit our own resouces!
alleluia
marker
Extra CO2 is a good thing after all, and not the end of the world predicted by global warming fear mongers.
What is the source of that interesting chart. Can it be quoted?
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