-Caveat Lector-

http://www.newscientist.com/ns/19991002/newsstory12.html

Forget rainforests

                         Fred Pearce

                         RISING LEVELS of greenhouse gases have led to
                         faster tree growth in arid regions. The
discovery
                         boosts the case for planting forests in dry
areas to
                         combat the effects of global warming.

                         Plants combine water with carbon dioxide to
create
                         complex chemicals. Xiahong Feng of Dartmouth
                         College in Hanover, New Hampshire, has shown
that
                         the rise in atmospheric CO2 over the past 200
years
                         has made this process more efficient.

                         Feng measured the changing ratio of different
isotopes
                         of carbon in the annual growth rings of a range
of
                         American trees. Short-term fluctuations
reflected
                         seasonal weather patterns, but Feng detected an

                         underlying trend that matched the rise in
global CO2
                         levels (Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, vol
63, p
                         1891). "The rate of increase [in water-use
efficiency]
                         started low in the 19th century, but increased
rapidly
                         for most trees in the 20th century," she says.

                         Water use is not the only factor that
determines how
                         fast plants grow. The availability of nutrients
and
                         competition from other plants also affect
growth. But
                         Feng says that in arid environments, where
moisture
                         limits tree growth, biomass may have increased
as a
                         result.

                         This finding may help climatologists balance
the
                         Earth's carbon budget. Around half the CO2 in
the
                         atmosphere that arises from human activity
swiftly
                         disappears. The oceans absorb some of it, but
most
                         researchers believe that much of the rest is
absorbed
                         by forests in cooler temperate regions,
including
                         Europe and North America. Feng's results,
however,
                         suggest that forests in arid regions may be
more
                         important than anyone realised.

                         The study will also encourage a group of
hydrologists
                         calling for an international effort to plant
trees in the
                         dry areas of the world, which are mostly
covered by
                         scrub and grazed by cattle or wildlife. After a
meeting
                         at UNESCO's headquarters in Paris in December,
a
                         group chaired by Arie Issar of the Jacob
Blaustein
                         Institute for Desert Research at Ben-Gurion
University
                         of the Negev in Israel proposed replanting
vegetation
                         in grazed areas to create vast parklands.

                         The countries that signed the UN Climate Change

                         Convention have discussed replanting tropical
                         rainforests, but Issar argues that the demands
of
                         agriculture and urbanisation in those regions
threaten
                         this approach. In contrast, in most dry lands,
the
                         density of the population is low and the demand
for
                         land insubstantial, he says.

                         There is often enough water in deserts for
growing
                         trees, according to Issar, though this may mean

                         reviving ancient irrigation systems and tapping

                         underground water. Although forests in dry
lands grow
                         at between a tenth and a quarter of the rate of
tropical
                         rainforest, he argues that the huge amounts of
land
                         available for tree planting in many arid
countries
                         should not be ignored in the race to halt
global
                         warming. Feng's discovery may tip the economic
                         balance towards planting dryland forests.

                                From New Scientist, 2 October 1999

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