Uploaded by nobodywho on Aug 23, 2010
How has the Atmospheric Carbon Uptake from Plants Changed in the Last Decade?
Credit to: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio
Plant life converts atmospheric carbon dioxide into biomass through photosynthesis. This process, called fixing, is one of the main ways in which carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere and is a major part of the carbon cycle. Plants release a fraction of this fixed carbon by respiration in order to get energy to live and to move carbon to other organs. The amount of carbon removed minus the amount of carbon respired is called the net primary productivity (NPP) and is the amount of carbon turned into biomass.
The change in NPP due to rising global temperatures is a very important factor in the response of the Earth to climate change. Measurements of radiation and leaf area from the MODIS instrument on NASA's Terra satellite have recently been used to calculate the change in NPP for the whole world for the last 10 years. This animation shows a time sequence of annual NPP deviation from normal (or 'anomaly') on land as measured by MODIS during the years 2000 through 2009. Annual NPP, especially its departures from a long-term mean condition, will demonstrate the effects of environmental drivers such as ENSO (El Nino) events, climate change, droughts, pollution episodes, land degradation, and agricultural expansion.
Earlier studies of productivity between 1982 and 1999 showed that prouctivity went up as global temperatures rose, because longer, warmer growing seasons were better for plant growth. This new study indicates that this is still true in the northern hemisphere, but that increased temperatures have meant increased drought and dryness in the tropics and the southern hemisphere. As a result, the global net productivity has actually decreased in the period from 2000 through 2009.
Regionally, negative annual NPP anomalies were mainly caused by large-scale droughts. In 2000, droughts reduced NPP in North America and China; in 2002, droughts reduced NPP in North America and Australia; in 2003, drought caused by a major heat wave reduced NPP in Europe; in 2005, severe droughts in the Amazon, Africa, and Australia greatly reduced both regional and global NPP; from 2007 through 2009 over large parts of Australia, continuous droughts reduced continental NPP.
-
0 likes, 0 dislikes
2:08
The Carbon Cycleby chaskehaverkos41,429 views
1:01
Global Land Area Gross Primary Productivity [1080p]by djxatlanta1,330 views
1:58
El Nino in full effectby WUPW14,746 views
0:38
Reforestation leads to Carbon Sequestrationby carbonfund545 views
4:37
Carbon Cycle Cartoonby champions4change131,880 views
3:38
Indoor NASA Plantsby FusionGuy093,876 views
4:17
Carbon Sequestration Cereal Demoby SciFri1,010 views
0:04
Plant Respirationby dizzo959,946 views
0:45
Carbon cycleby melisnic9,986 views
0:36
The Midday Report: Floods bring drought reliefby NewsOnABC318 views
2:29
Visualizing El Nino From NASA Scientific Visualization Studioby BobTisdale18,144 views
0:44
The Australian Drought story (part two)by BloodyHardtimes1,239 views
20:38
WHMIS - Material Safety Data Sheets (4 of 5)by WorkSafeBC16,449 views
0:41
Flight path of AA77 into the pentagonby mtvcmiller15,081 views
2:06
NASA UFO BANNED VIDEO!!! CRAZY!!!by undercoveralien8,038,602 views
1:00
28. Paris • Franceby 100PlacesToRemember2,903 views
9:02
Loose Women: Top Moments From The Past Decade (02.10.09)by x7tinkerbell7x16,069 views
9:39
The Orbiting Carbon Observatory (3/4)by BrunoTheQuestionable1,146 views
12:48
Carbon Capture and Storage, 2008by NETLMultimedia5,557 views
10:00
Is Your Product Too Expensive? How to calculate price and cost.by MarkProffitt3,429 views
- Loading more suggestions...
Link to this comment:
All Comments (0)