Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumPlanet's Land Carbon Sinks Failed In 2023 - Almost No Net Uptake Of Atmospheric CO2 By Forests, Grasslands, Soils
It begins each day at nightfall. As the light disappears, billions of zooplankton, crustaceans and other marine organisms rise to the ocean surface to feed on microscopic algae, returning to the depths at sunrise. The waste from this frenzy Earths largest migration of creatures sinks to the ocean floor, removing millions of tonnes of carbon from the atmosphere each year. This activity is one of thousands of natural processes that regulate the Earths climate. Together, the planets oceans, forests, soils and other natural carbon sinks absorb about half of all human emissions.
But as the Earth heats up, scientists are increasingly concerned that those crucial processes are breaking down. In 2023, the hottest year ever recorded, preliminary findings by an international team of researchers show the amount of carbon absorbed by land has temporarily collapsed. The final result was that forest, plants and soil as a net category absorbed almost no carbon. There are warning signs at sea, too. Greenlands glaciers and Arctic ice sheets are melting faster than expected, which is disrupting the Gulf Stream ocean current and slows the rate at which oceans absorb carbon. For the algae-eating zooplankton, melting sea ice is exposing them to more sunlight a shift scientists say could keep them in the depths for longer, disrupting the vertical migration that stores carbon on the ocean floor.
Were seeing cracks in the resilience of the Earths systems. Were seeing massive cracks on land terrestrial ecosystems are losing their carbon store and carbon uptake capacity, but the oceans are also showing signs of instability, Johan Rockström, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, told an event at New York Climate Week in September. Nature has so far balanced our abuse. This is coming to an end, he said.
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Overall, models agreed that both the land sink and the ocean sink are going to decrease in the future as a result of climate change. But theres a question of how quickly that will happen. The models tend to show this happening rather slowly over the next 100 years or so, says Prof Andrew Watson, head of Exeter Universitys marine and atmospheric science group. This might happen a lot quicker, he says. Climate scientists [are] worried about climate change not because of the things that are in the models but the knowledge that the models are missing certain things. Many of the latest Earth systems models used by scientists include some of the effects of global heating on nature, factoring in impacts such as the dieback of the Amazon or slowing ocean currents. But events that have become major sources of emissions in recent years have not been incorporated, say scientists. None of these models have factored in losses like extreme factors which have been observed, such as the wildfires in Canada last year that amounted to six months of US fossil emissions. Two years before, we wrote a paper that found that Siberia also lost the same amount of carbon, says Ciais.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/oct/14/nature-carbon-sink-collapse-global-heating-models-emissions-targets-evidence-aoe
Think. Again.
(17,324 posts)Thank you for your posts, hatrack.
If Humanity isn't going to do anything to stop all this, at least some of us can try to document the death of the only life in the universe we know of.