ETH Zurich: Millions of years for plants to recover from global warming
https://ethz.ch/en/news-and-events/eth-news/news/2024/08/millions-of-years-for-plants-to-recover-from-global-warming.htmlMillions of years for plants to recover from global warming
CLIMATE SCIENCES
RESEARCH
Catastrophic volcanic eruptions that warmed the planet millions of years ago shed new light on how plants evolve and regulate climate. Researchers reveal the long-term climate effects of disturbed natural ecosystems - its implications both in geological history and for today.
08.08.2024 by Marianne Lucien
Move, adapt, or perish
The recovery of vegetation from the Siberian Traps event took several millions of years and during this time Earths carbon-climate regulation system would have been weak and inefficient resulting in long-term climate warming, explains lead author, Julian Rogger, ETH Zurich.
They also found that the time it takes for the climate to reach a new state of equilibrium depended on how fast vegetation adapted to increasing temperatures. Some species adapted by evolving and others by migrating geographically to cooler regions. However, some geological events were so catastrophic that plant species simply did not have enough time to migrate or adapt to the sustained increase in temperature. The consequences of which left its geochemical mark on climate evolution for thousands, possibly millions, of years.
Todays human-induced climate crisis
What does this mean for human induced climate change? The study found that a disruption of vegetation increased the duration and severity of climate warming in the geologic past. In some cases, it may have taken millions of years to reach a new stable climatic equilibrium due to a reduced capacity of vegetation to regulate Earths carbon cycle.
Today, we find ourselves in a major global bioclimatic crisis, comments Loïc Pellissier, Professor of Ecosystems and Landscape Evolution at ETH Zurich and WSL. Our study demonstrates the role of a functioning of vegetation to recover from abrupt climatic changes. We are currently releasing greenhouse gases at a faster rate than any previous volcanic event. We are also the primary cause of global deforestation, which strongly reduces the ability of natural ecosystems to regulate the climate. This study, in my perspective, serves as wake-up call for the global community.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.adn3450