London [UK]: A landmark study has found, the world's forests are losing their ability to absorb carbon due to increasingly 'unstable' conditions caused by humans. Dramatic changes to forests, and other habitats that store carbon in plants and soils, are becoming more likely in some regions across Earth, with less carbon consistently absorbed by the 'land carbon sink' provided by trees, soil and plants, according to scientists writing in Nature.
The short-term impacts of rising temperatures, deforestation and farming on many vulnerable landscapes mean carbon stores on land are less likely to recover in the longer term, the scientists say. This reduces the overall storage capacity of the land to absorb carbon and undermines global efforts to curb or lower levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
Dr Patrick McGuire, a climate scientist working jointly in the Department of Meteorology and the National Centre for Atmospheric Science branch, both at the University of Reading, UK, was a co-author of the new study, which was led by colleagues at CREAF, Barcelona, and Antwerp University.
Dr McGuire said: "We found that large regions of the world are vulnerable to sudden and dramatic changes to their landscape because the ability of their ecosystems to absorb carbon starts to destabilise. "For example, forest fires in California are more likely because of extremely dry and hot conditions caused by a hotter atmosphere. More fires mean the forest turns to scrubland, sometimes permanently. This reduces the land's overall ability to suck carbon out of the atmosphere as it did before. "This creates a vicious cycle as areas such as these become more vulnerable to the effects of climate change in the future."
Unstable carbon storage:Researchers found that from 1981-2018, ecosystems worldwide moved through different phases, ranging from high productivity, when plants were able to take in more carbon, to low productivity, when plants were less able to absorb carbon. The scale of these fluctuations creates a greater risk of destabilisation, increasing the risk of abrupt landscape changes as ecosystems cannot acclimate to climate change, deforestation, and changes to biodiversity, among other factors.