Duncan Golicher
The global carbon cycle is influenced by anthropogenic carbon emissions
This is a concern, as it may impact a wide range of ecosystems
Initiatives to reduce carbon emissions can impact ecosystems
Dominated by nitrogen (78%)
Around 1/5th is oxygen (20%)
Trace gases including argon 1%
Carbon dioxide at a very low concentration (~450 ppm = 0.045%)
Essentially yes
Nitrogen can never be converted to oxygen
Only carbon dioxide can be converted to oxygen through photosynthesis.
20% + 0.045% is still only 20.045%
So forests do not produce meaningful amounts of oxygen.
(1 billion tons carbon = 3.7 billion tons CO2)
(1 billion tons carbon = 3.7 billion tons CO2)
Total emissions around 10 Pgs carbon per year (still increasing). Stock in atmosphere ~750 Pgs
Emissions have added ~270 Pgs since the industrial revolution
Around 50% is added to the atmosphere ~ 5 Pgs per year
About 25% (uncertain) dissolves in the sea ~2.5 Pgs per year
About 25% is absorbed by terrestrial ecosystems ~ 2.5 Pgs per year
Forests release carbon when they are cut down
Forests absorb carbon when they are growing
Estimated total forest sink of 2.4 +/- 0.4 petagrams of carbon per year (Pg C year(-1)) (Pan et al. 2011)
Losses through deforestation may be ~1.1 Pg
Other terrestrial systems also take up carbon and store it.
Leaves hold carbon for short time scales
Lignin in trees and woody plants leads to long term storage
Storage in roots may be substantial
Measurements of carbon and radiocarbon (C-14) inventory were used to determine the turnover time and maximum rate of CO2 production from heterotrophic respiration of three fractions of soil organic matter (SOM): recognizable litter fragments (L), humified low density material (H), and high density or mineral-associated organic matter (M). Turnover times in all fractions increased with soil depth and were 2-5 years for recognizable leaf litter, 5-10 years for root litter, 40-100+ years for low density humified material and > 100 years for carbon associated with minerals. These turnover times represent the time carbon resides in the plant + soil system, and may underestimate actual decomposition rates if carbon resides for several years in living root, plant or woody material.(Gaudinski et al. 2000)
Typically only a small fraction of the carbon is harvested as food
Carbon cycles partly through herbivores in grasslands
Crop resides and dead grass lead to direct inputs.
However, studies suggest that roots contribute more to long term below ground storage (Kätterer et al. 2011)
Oceans tend to sequester more carbon than they release (Feely et al. 2004)
However, carbon from deep oceans can return to the surface
Ocean acidification was originally considered to be of concern due to nitric acid (Vitousek et al. 1997)
Carbonic acid concentrations have not yet risen high enough to affect pH.
Considerable uncertainty regarding long term effects
Early predictions from modelling enhanced CO2 do not appear to have been fully validated (Orr et al. 2005)
“Acidification alters seawater chemical speciation and biogeochemical cycles of many elements and compounds. One well-known effect is the lowering of calcium carbonate saturation states, which impacts shell-forming marine organisms from plankton to benthic molluses, echinoderms, and corals. Many calcifying species exhibit reduced calcification and growth rates in laboratory experiments under high-CO2 conditions. Ocean acidification also causes an increase in carbon fixation rates in some photosynthetic organisms (both calcifying and noncalcifying). The potential for marine organisms to adapt to increasing CO2 and broader implications for ocean ecosystems are not well known; both are high priorities for future research. Although ocean pH has varied in the geological past, paleo events may be only imperfect analogs to current conditions.”
(Doney et al. 2009)
(Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2014)
“A feedback occurs when part of the output from a system is added or subtracted to the input modifying the result. Amplifying feedbacks are positive and dampening feed-backs negative. Systems dominated by negative feedbacks are inherently stable and systems where positive feedbacks predominate are unstable. Earth climate system is known to be stable as, unlike other planets, it has maintained a narrow range of life-compatible temperature variability for nearly four billion years, during which all sort of events have pushed it towards both temperature extremes. Climate feedbacks cannot be observed, since by definition they are the effect of one variable on another. Feedback relationship between correlating variables can only be inferred probabilistically or estimated with models. In the same sense feedbacks cannot be deduced from observations, they must be deduced from theory or from model observations. In a complex system such as climate there is a great uncertainty that all relevant feedbacks have been correctly identified” (Vinós 2022)
(Vinós 2022)
http://r.bournemouth.ac.uk:82/Ecosystems/papers/Vinos-CPPF2022.pdf