Here's how it all works: Trees do their part to mitigate climate change
by absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis; worldwide, forests have absorbed as much as 30 percent of our annual global carbon emissions over the past few decades.
An «inherent bias» in scientific journals in favour of more calamitous predictions has excluded research showing that marine creatures are not damaged by ocean acidification, which is caused by the
sea absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
However, researchers from Lund University in Sweden and other institutions have now shown that deforestation could also disrupt the entire rainforest's resilience, that is, its long - term ability to recover from environmental changes, and the ability to
absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Machines could
absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, slowing or even reversing its rise and reducing global warming
In these areas, deep ocean waters that are naturally rich in carbon dioxide are upwelling and mixing with surface waters that are
absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
The paper confirms that as carbon emissions continue to climb, so too has Earth's capacity to
absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Understanding the proportion of both is important for determining whether a large area of forest is a source of carbon dioxide, or a «sink» that helps to
absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Ocean acidification in particular, caused as the ocean
absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, is a grave concern for stony corals, because it makes it harder for the animals to passively precipitate skeletons made of calcium carbonate, the same molecule found in antacids for heartburn and indigestion.
Lesser vegetations mean lesser capacity of natural «sinks» to
absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
As regional warming caused an increased number of trees to die, there would be less living trees to
absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Over the course of a tree «slife
it absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and thenreleases...
The oceans play an important role in the earth's climate; they transport heat from equator to pole, provide moisture for rain, and
absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Carol Turley from the Plymouth Marine Laboratory in the UK said the oceans are becoming more acidic because they are
absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.