
Tree planting has been widely touted as a cost-effective way of reducing global warming, due to trees鈥 ability to store large quantities of carbon from the atmosphere.
Tree planting has been widely touted as a cost-effective way of reducing global warming, due to trees鈥 ability to store large quantities of carbon from the atmosphere.
But, writing in the journal Nature Geoscience, an international group of scientists, led by the 探花直播 of Cambridge and the 探花直播 of 脜rhus,听 that tree planting at high latitudes will accelerate, rather than decelerate, global warming.
As the climate continues to warm, trees can be planted further and further north, and large-scale tree-planting projects in the Arctic have been championed by governments and corporations as a way to mitigate the worst effects of climate change.
However, when trees are planted in the wrong places - such as normally treeless tundra and mires, as well as large areas of the boreal forest with relatively open tree canopies - they can make global warming worse.
According to lead author Assistant Professor Jeppe Kristensen from Aarhus 探花直播 in Denmark, the unique characteristics of Arctic and sub-Arctic ecosystems make them poorly suited for tree planting for climate mitigation.
鈥淪oils in the Arctic store more carbon than all vegetation on Earth,鈥 said Kristensen. 鈥淭hese soils are vulnerable to disturbances, such as cultivation for forestry or agriculture, but also the penetration of tree roots. 探花直播semi-continuous daylight during the spring and early summer, when snow is still on the ground, also makes the energy balance in this region extremely sensitive to surface darkening, since green and brown trees will soak up more heat from the sun than white snow.鈥澨
In addition, the regions surrounding the North Pole in North America, Asia and Scandinavia are prone to natural disturbances - such as wildfires and droughts - that kill off vegetation. Climate change makes these disturbances both more frequent and more severe.
鈥淭his is a risky place to be a tree, particularly as part of a homogeneous plantation that is more vulnerable to such disturbances,鈥 said Kristensen. 鈥 探花直播carbon stored in these trees risks fuelling disturbances and getting released back to the atmosphere within a few decades.鈥
探花直播researchers say that tree planting at high latitudes is a prime example of a climate solution with a desired effect in one context but the opposite effect in another.
鈥 探花直播climate debate is very carbon-focused because the main way humans have modified the Earth鈥檚 climate in the last century is through emitting greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels,鈥 said Kristensen. 鈥淏ut at the core, climate change is the result of how much solar energy entering the atmosphere stays, and how much leaves again 鈥 Earth鈥檚 so-called energy balance.鈥
Greenhouse gases are one important determinant of how much heat can escape our planet鈥檚 atmosphere. However, the researchers say that at high latitudes, how much sunlight is reflected back into space, without being converted into heat (known as the albedo effect), is more important than carbon storage for the total energy balance.
探花直播researchers are calling for a more holistic view of ecosystems to identify truly meaningful nature-based solutions that do not compromise the overall goal: slowing down climate change.
鈥淎 holistic approach is not just a richer way of looking at the climate effects of nature-based solutions, but it鈥檚 imperative if we鈥檙e going to make a difference in the real world,鈥 said senior author Professor Marc Macias-Fauria, from the 探花直播 of Cambridge鈥檚 Scott Polar Research Institute.
However, the researchers recognise that there can be other reasons for planting trees, such as timber self-sufficiency, but these cases do not come with bonuses for climate mitigation.
鈥淔orestry in the far North should be viewed like any other production system and compensate for its negative impact on the climate and biodiversity,鈥 said Macias-Fauria. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 have your cake and eat it, and you can鈥檛 deceive the Earth. By selling northern afforestation as a climate solution, we鈥檙e only fooling ourselves.鈥
So how can we moderate global warming at high latitudes? 探花直播researchers suggest that working with local communities to support sustainable populations of large herbivores, such as caribou, could be a more viable nature-based solution to climate change in Arctic and subarctic regions than planting millions of trees.听
鈥淭here is ample evidence that large herbivores affect plant communities and snow conditions in ways that result in net cooling,鈥 said Macias-Fauria. 鈥淭his happens both directly, by keeping tundra landscapes open, and indirectly, through the effects of herbivore winter foraging, where they modify the snow and decrease its insulation capacity, reducing soil temperatures and permafrost thaw.鈥
探花直播researchers say it鈥檚 vital to consider biodiversity and the livelihoods of local communities in the pursuit of nature-based climate solutions.
鈥淟arge herbivores can reduce climate-driven biodiversity loss in Arctic ecosystems and remain a fundamental food resource for local communities,鈥 said Macias-Fauria. 鈥淏iodiversity and local communities are not an added benefit to nature-based solutions: they are fundamental. Any nature-based solutions must be led by the communities who live at the front line of climate change.鈥
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Reference:
Jeppe 脜听Kristensen et al. 鈥.鈥 Nature Geoscience (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41561-024-01573-4
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