The Toughest Phone HONOR X9d 5G Launched At PHP 17,999 With A Chance To Win Tesla Cybertruck

HONOR Philippines launches the highly anticipated HONOR X9d 5G, priced at PHP 17,999.

Why Tarantadong Kalbo Needs Only A Few Lines To Say Everything

In a crowded digital space, Tarantadong Kalbo shows how restraint and intention can make visual commentary speak louder than excess. #PAGEONESpotlight #PAGEONESpotlight_KevinEricRaymundo #PAGEONESpotlight_TarantadongKalbo

Vivant Energy Secures 15-Year PSA To Meet Siquijor’s Growing Power Demand

Vivant Energy secured a 15-year power supply agreement to support Siquijor’s growing electricity demand amid rising tourism and economic activity.

How Tarantadong Kalbo Built Power Through Simplicity

Kevin Eric Raymundo reflects on how Tarantadong Kalbo began as a joke and gradually evolved into a platform for thoughtful social commentary grounded in honesty and restraint. #PAGEONESpotlight_KevinEricRaymundo #PAGEONESpotlight_TarantadongKalbo

Trees May Emit Less Carbon Dioxide Under Climate Warming Than Expected

This research shows that trees may help in reducing carbon emissions under a warming climate, altering the environmental narrative.

Trees May Emit Less Carbon Dioxide Under Climate Warming Than Expected

42
42

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Trees may release far less carbon dioxide (CO2) under future climate warming than previously thought, potentially easing fears of runaway emissions from forests, a major international study has revealed.

The study offers new insights into how trees respond to rising temperatures. The team analyzed thousands of measurements of stem respiration, the process by which trees release CO2, from hundreds of tree species across all major climate zones, a press release from the Western Sydney University said on Friday.

The study, published in Science, challenges long-standing assumptions.

It suggests that, contrary to what most global models have assumed, the short-term responses of trees to temperature do not necessarily apply over the long term. Instead, the data indicate that trees gradually adjust to rising temperatures, and this thermal acclimation helps reduce the anticipated increase in CO2 emissions, the release said.

Trees respire to generate energy, releasing CO2 in the process. Stem respiration is a key component of the global carbon cycle, and until now, scientists believed that warming would sharply increase emissions from forests, further accelerating climate change, according to the study led by researchers at China’s Tsinghua University and involving scientists from the Western Sydney University, Imperial College London, among others.

“This is likely true, but this latest research reveals that carbon fluxes under warmer future climates will not increase as much as currently thought,” said Distinguished Professor Ian Wright, chief scientist at the Western Sydney University’s Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment.

The research draws on a global dataset, including data from Australian savannas, rainforests, and woodlands collected over the past decade, the release said, adding that the findings offer hope that forests may play a more resilient role than expected in regulating Earth’s climate. (PNA)