Shock ..the world might not end
.
Scientists
make surprise discovery of massive new forests around the world
A new study from an international team of scientists has found that
the globe is become greener, and CO2 emissions are the main culprit as the
fertilizer. (Getty Images)
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Recent
global analysis of the Earth?s drylands has discovered 467 million hectares
of unreported forested areas ? or roughly seven times the size of Texas ?
located in drylands across the world. The discovery has lent more
credence to the theory that increasing levels of man-made CO2
emissions are actually helping to increase global
greening.
The study, conducted by
biologists Andrew Lowe and Ben Sparrow as well as 28 other co-authors,
used modern high-resolution satellite imagery via Google Earth Engine to map
210,000 drylands. This high-resolution imagery allowed
biologists to discover that forests cover a whopping 9 percent
more of the world than previously thought.
?We
found new dryland forest on all inhabited continents, but mainly in
sub-Saharan Africa, around the Mediterranean, central India, coastal
Australia, western South America, northeastern Brazil, northern Colombia and
Venezuela, and northern parts of the boreal forests in Canada and Russia. In
Africa, our study has doubled the amount of known dryland forest,? Lowe and Sparrow wrote in
their report at The Conversation.
?With
current satellite imagery and mapping techniques, it might seem amazing that
these forests have stayed hidden in plain sight for so long. But this type
of forest was previously difficult to measure globally, because of the
relatively low density of trees,? the report said.
This
greening is likely the result of the fertilizing effects of CO2, as
revealed in a 2016 study by an international team of 32 scientists
from 24 institutions. The study, titled ?Greening of the Earth and its
Drivers,? utilized satellite sensors over the span of 33 years to
monitor the Earth?s vegetation. What they found was that the Earth had
greened significantly due to increased CO2 emissions. The greening was
equivalent to ?adding a green continent about two-times the size of mainland
USA,? according to a
statement by Dr. Zaichun Zhu, a researcher from China?s
Peking University.
Furthermore,
the 2016 study also revealed that only 4 percent of the
Earth showed global ?browning?:
We
show a persistent and widespread increase of growing season integrated LAI
(greening) over 25% to 50% of the global vegetated area, whereas less than
4% of the globe shows decreasing LAI (browning). Factorial simulations
with multiple global ecosystem models suggest that CO2fertilization
effects explain 70% of the observed greening
trend.
?We
were able to tie the greening largely to the fertilizing effect of rising
atmospheric CO2 concentration by tasking several computer models to mimic
plant growth observed in the satellite data,? co-author Prof. Ranga Myneni
of the Department of Earth and Environment at Boston University
said.
Climate
scientist Patrick Michaels of the Cato
Institute noted that the new study from Lowe and
Sparrow, as well as the 2016 study, contradicts
conventional predictions that an increase in CO2 emissions
would cause an increase in dead foliage and arid regions
throughout the world.
?This
may lead to a remarkable hypothesis ? that one of the reasons the forested
regions were undercounted in previous surveys (among other reasons) is that
there wasn?t enough vegetation present to meet Bastin?s criterion for
?forest,? which is greater than 10% tree cover, and carbon dioxide and
global warming changed that,? Michaels
wrote.