Current:Home > ContactEl Niño’s Warning: Satellite Shows How Forest CO2 Emissions Can Skyrocket -EverVision Finance
El Niño’s Warning: Satellite Shows How Forest CO2 Emissions Can Skyrocket
View
Date:2025-04-13 05:28:35
During the last El Niño, global average temperatures spiked to more than 1 degree Celsius above pre-industrial levels for the first time on record, and carbon dioxide levels increased at a record pace.
Now, scientists working with data from a carbon-tracking satellite have figured out where most of that CO2 surge came from. The source was three massive tropical forest regions, in different parts of the world, that each responded to the rising temperatures in a very different way:
- “In the Amazon, El Niño clobbered photosynthesis,” said Colorado State University climate researcher Scott Denning. During the drought caused by El Niño, the rainforest stopped inhaling CO2, meaning more was going into the atmosphere.
- In the tropical jungles and forests of Africa, record warmth and rain combined to speed the decomposition of plant debris. “Stuff just rotted faster,” increasing climate-warming emissions, he said.
- And in Indonesia, hot and dry conditions helped spur intense fires that burned deep into carbon-rich peat soils, releasing even more CO2 and methane.
If those forest regions respond to global warming being caused by human activities in the same way they did during the 2015 El Niño temperature spike, they will become net sources of CO2 instead of carbon sinks, Denning said.
“Up to now, land ecosystems, mainly forests, have been mitigating part of the fossil fuel problem. They’ve been sucking CO2 out of air, about 25 percent of our fossil fuel emissions,” he said. “The worry is that, as the climate warms, that will stop, and that’s exactly what we saw.”
Warming Fuels Drought Fuels Warming
During El Niño, the ocean in the equatorial Pacific is warmer than average, which also warms areas over land and changes precipitation patterns.
During the 2015 El Niño, “there were three completely different responses to the climate event and they resulted in the release of nearly 3 gigatons of carbon, equal to about a third of all the emissions from fossil fuel burning, so this isn’t just some small detail,” Denning said.
Even before the findings announced by NASA last week from the satellite data analyses, scientists had already attributed nearly all of the record 2015 warmth to the buildup of heat-trapping greenhouse gases. They also knew that, in 2015 and 2016, CO2 was building up faster in the atmosphere, which was puzzling, because emissions from human sources weren’t increasing at that pace.
Scientists suspected that the extra warming boost caused by El Niño was a factor, and the new satellite data on CO2 confirms it, said Annmarie Eldering, the deputy project scientist for the NASA/JPL OCO-2 mission, which tracks CO2 by measuring slight changes in the reflectivity of the atmosphere.
“We know there’s variability in the natural system, but it’s not driving the direction of change,” she said. “More and longer droughts will increase CO2, which will warm Earth even more.”
The new information shows how changes in land-surface processes are driving CO2 trends, said Paul Palmer head of an atmospheric research team at University of Edinburgh and part of OCO-2 science team.
Satellite’s Data Is a Giant Step Forward
Denning, who has been studying the carbon cycle for 25 years and is also on the OCO-2 science team, said the new satellite measurements mark a giant step forward for scientists measuring changes in the atmosphere.
“We used to do this literally by FedEx,” he said. We’d send 2 liter glass bottles to remote sites all around the world and ask volunteers to fill them. They would send them back by FedEx to be tested in a lab in Boulder. When I was a grad student, we had 100 measurements a week. Now we have 100,000 per day.”
The lab tests are more sensitive and provide more exact chemical breakdowns, but what the satellite readings lack in detail, they more than compensate with sheer volume and the ability to measure carbon across big areas of the landscape. Measuring the CO2 pulses in 2015 and 2016 was like a “natural” experiment, he said.
“You couldn’t go out and shut off the Amazon, or stop the rainfall, but the Earth can, and watching it was amazing,” he said. “We could observe the gory details of the changes in the CO2 cycle that resulted from the changes in the climate.”
veryGood! (8295)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Behind the scenes with Deion Sanders, Colorado's uber-confident football czar
- Opening statements begin in website founder’s 2nd trial over ads promoting prostitution
- Aaron Rodgers’ quest to turn Jets into contenders is NFL’s top storyline entering the season
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- What causes dehydration? Here's how fluid loss can severely impact your health.
- The Lineup for Freeform's 31 Nights of Halloween Is Here and It's Spooktacular
- Jury in Jan. 6 case asks judge about risk of angry defendant accessing their personal information
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Judge rules suspect in Ralph Yarl shooting will face trial
Ranking
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Hyundai and LG will invest an additional $2B into making batteries at Georgia electric vehicle plant
- Khloe Kardashian Makes Son Tatum Thompson’s Name Official
- Fifth inmate dead in five weeks at troubled Georgia jail being probed by feds
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Grammy-winning British conductor steps away from performing after allegedly hitting a singer
- A 'conservation success': Texas zoo hatches 4 critically endangered gharial crocodiles
- Most states have yet to permanently fund 988 Lifeline despite early successes
Recommendation
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Mississippi candidate for attorney general says the state isn’t doing enough to protect workers
'Only Murders' post removed from Selena Gomez's Instagram amid strikes: Reports
Trial underway for Iowa teenager accused of murdering 2 at school for at-risk youth
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Texas wanted armed officers at every school after Uvalde. Many can’t meet that standard
Los Angeles Rams WR Cooper Kupp has setback in hamstring injury recovery
Maui wildfire survivors were left without life-saving medicine. A doctor stepped up to provide them for free.