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hatrack

(59,584 posts)
Fri May 22, 2015, 07:21 PM May 2015

Oops. 40-Year Study Shows Higher CO2 Benefits To Grasslands Canceled Out By Other Factors

BOZEMAN – More than 40 years' of evidence from a mountain meadow shows that increasing carbon dioxide levels don't help plants. In fact, the opposite is true: Grassland productivity today in one Montana meadow is half of what it was in 1969, when AM ruled the airwaves and atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations were 327 parts per million, 20 percent lower than today's.

Researchers concluded that increasing aridity in the greater Yellowstone ecosystem countered any gains plants might have enjoyed from the increased carbon dioxide. "Our long-term results of declining grassland production contrast with the results of some models and short-term experiments," said Jack Brookshire, a professor at Montana State University who co-authored the report, published last week in the journal Nature Communications.

The debate over the fertilizing effects of carbon dioxide and, to a lesser extent, warmer temperatures, has fed a theory by those arguing against emissions reductions that human-driven climate change could be beneficial.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture reported last year, for instance, that more carbon could increase yields of wheat, rice and soybeans by up to 15 percent. But those studies often fail to consider other impacts, such as rainfall or extreme weather. That was the case in the Montana meadow, Brookshire said in a statement. "Dryness over the last several decades is outpacing any potential growth stimulation from increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide and nitrogen deposition," he said.

EDIT

http://www.dailyclimate.org/tdc-newsroom/2015/05/co2-plant-benefits-climate-impacts

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