Forests, carbon and global climate

被引:180
|
作者
Malhi, Y [1 ]
Meir, P
Brown, S
机构
[1] Univ Edinburgh, Inst Ecol & Resource Management, Edinburgh EH9 3JU, Midlothian, Scotland
[2] Winrock Int Livestock Res & Training Ctr, Arlington, VA 22209 USA
关键词
carbon sink; deforestation; climate change; Kyoto Protocol; tropical forest;
D O I
10.1098/rsta.2002.1020
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
This review places into context the role that forest ecosystems play in the global carbon cycle, and their potential interactions with climate change. We first examine the natural, preindustrial carbon cycle. Every year forest gross photosynthesis cycles approximately one-twelfth of the atmospheric stock of carbon dioxide, accounting for 50% of terrestrial photosynthesis. This cycling has remained almost constant since the end of the last ice age, but since the Industrial Revolution it has undergone substantial disruption as a result of the injection of 480 PgC into the atmosphere through fossil-fuel combustion and land-use change, including forest clearance. In the second part of this paper we review this 'carbon disruption', and its impact on the oceans, atmosphere and biosphere. Tropical deforestation is resulting in a release of 1.7 PgC yr(-1) into the atmosphere. However, there is also strong evidence for a 'sink' for carbon in natural vegetation (carbon absorption), which can be explained partly by the regrowth of forests on abandoned lands, and partly by a global change factor, the most likely cause being 'fertilization' resulting from the increase in atmospheric CO2. In the 1990s this biosphere sink was estimated to be sequestering 3.2 PgC yr(-1) and is likely to have substantial effects on the dynamics, structure and biodiversity of all forests. Finally, we examine the potential for forest protection and afforestation to mitigate climate change. An extensive global carbon sequestration programme has the potential to make a particularly significant contribution to controlling the rise in CO2 emissions in the next few decades. In the course of the whole century, however, even the maximum amount of carbon that could be sequestered will be dwarfed by the magnitude of (projected) fossil-fuel emissions. Forest carbon sequestration should only be viewed as a component of a mitigation strategy, not as a substitute for the changes in energy supply, use and technology that will be required if atmospheric CO2 concentrations are to be stabilized.
引用
收藏
页码:1567 / 1591
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Central African forests, carbon and climate change
    Justice, C
    Wilkie, D
    Zhang, QF
    Brunner, J
    Donoghue, C
    CLIMATE RESEARCH, 2001, 17 (02) : 229 - 246
  • [22] Climate change - Forests fail as carbon sink
    Lawrence, D
    GEOTIMES, 2001, 46 (07): : 8 - 8
  • [23] Biodiversity in US Forests under Global Climate Change
    Andrew Hansen
    Virginia Dale
    Ecosystems, 2001, 4 : 161 - 163
  • [24] Climate change increases global risk to urban forests
    Manuel Esperon-Rodriguez
    Mark G. Tjoelker
    Jonathan Lenoir
    John B. Baumgartner
    Linda J. Beaumont
    David A. Nipperess
    Sally A. Power
    Benoît Richard
    Paul D. Rymer
    Rachael V. Gallagher
    Nature Climate Change, 2022, 12 : 950 - 955
  • [25] Biodiversity in US forests under global climate change
    Hansen, A
    Dale, V
    ECOSYSTEMS, 2001, 4 (03) : 161 - 163
  • [26] Climate change increases global risk to urban forests
    Esperon-Rodriguez, Manuel
    Tjoelker, Mark G.
    Lenoir, Jonathan
    Baumgartner, John B.
    Beaumont, Linda J.
    Nipperess, David A.
    Power, Sally A.
    Richard, Benoit
    Rymer, Paul D.
    Gallagher, Rachael, V
    NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2022, 12 (10) : 950 - +
  • [27] The wolf is at the door: Forests, foresters, and Global Climate Change
    Miller, Char
    JOURNAL OF FORESTRY, 2008, 106 (01) : 5 - 6
  • [28] Evaluation of climate-related carbon turnover processes in global vegetation models for boreal and temperate forests
    Thurner, Martin
    Beer, Christian
    Ciais, Philippe
    Friend, Andrew D.
    Ito, Akihiko
    Kleidon, Axel
    Lomas, Mark R.
    Shaun Quegan
    Rademacher, Tim T.
    Schaphoff, Sibyll
    Tum, Markus
    Wiltshire, Andy
    Carvalhais, Nuno
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2017, 23 (08) : 3076 - 3091
  • [29] Global economic effects of changes in crops, pasture, and forests due to changing climate, carbon dioxide, and ozone
    Reilly, J.
    Paltsev, S.
    Felzer, B.
    Wang, X.
    Kicklighter, D.
    Melillo, J.
    Prinn, R.
    Sarofim, M.
    Sokolov, A.
    Wang, C.
    ENERGY POLICY, 2007, 35 (11) : 5370 - 5383
  • [30] Canada's forests and the global carbon cycle
    Anon
    Forestry Chronicle, 2002, 78 (04):