April 9, 2007
Carnegie Contact: Dr. Ken Caldeira
650-704-7212 or kcaldeira@globalecology.stanford.edu
For a copy of the
paper, contact PNAS at PNASNews@nas.edu
Tropical
forests: EarthÕs air conditioner
Stanford,
Calif. Ð Planting
and protecting treesÑwhich trap and absorb carbon dioxide as they growÑcan help
to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. But a new study suggests that, as
a way to fight global warming, the effectiveness of this strategy depends heavily
on where these trees are planted. In particular, tropical forests are very
efficient at keeping the Earth at a happy, healthy temperature.
The researchers,
including Ken Caldeira of CarnegieÕs Department of Global Ecology and Govindasamy
Bala at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, found that because tropical
forests store large amounts of carbon and produce reflective clouds, they are
especially good at cooling the planet. In contrast, forests in snowy areas can warm
the Earth, because their dark canopy absorbs sunlight that would otherwise be reflected
back to space by a bright white covering of snow.
The work
simulates the effects of large-scale deforestation, and accounts for the
positive and negative climate effects of tree cover at different latitudes. The
result, which appears in this weekÕs early online edition of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences, makes a strong case for protecting and restoring tropical
forests.
ÒTropical
forests are like EarthÕs air conditioner,Ó Caldeira said. ÒWhen it comes to rehabilitating
forests to fight global warming, carbon dioxide might be only half of the story;
we also have to account for whether they help to reflect sunlight by producing
clouds, or help to absorb it by shading snowy tundra.Ó
Forests in
colder, sub-polar latitudes evaporate less water and are less effective at
producing clouds. As a result, the main climate effect of these forests is to
increase the absorption of sunlight, which can overwhelm the cooling effect of
carbon storage.
However, Caldeira
believes it would be counterproductive to cut down forests in snowy areas, even
if it could help to combat global warming. ÒA primary reason we are trying to
slow global warming is to protect nature,Ó he explains. ÒIt just makes no sense
to destroy natural ecosystems in the name of saving natural ecosystems.Ó

The Carnegie
Institution of Washington (www.carnegieinstitution.org),
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scientific research since 1902. It has six research departments: the
Geophysical Laboratory and the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, both
located in Washington, D.C.; The Observatories, in Pasadena, California, and
Chile; the Department of Plant Biology and the Department of Global Ecology, in
Stanford, California; and the Department of Embryology, in Baltimore, Maryland.