Storing carbon in forests is a leading land-based strategy to curb anthropogenic climate change, but its planetary cooling effect is opposed by warming from low albedo. Using detailed geospatial data from Earth-observing satellites and the national forest inventory, we quantify the net climate effect of losing forest across the conterminous United States. We find that forest loss in the intermountain and Rocky Mountain West causes net planetary cooling but losses east of the Mississippi River and in Pacific Coast states tend toward net warming. Actual U.S. forest conversions from 1986 to 2000 cause net cooling for a decade but then transition to a large net warming over a century. Avoiding these forest conversions could have yielded a 100-year average annual global cooling of 0.00088°C. This would offset 17% of the 100-year climate warming effect from a single year of U.S. fossil fuel emissions, underscoring the scale of the mitigation challenge.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aax8859 | DOI Listing |
Environ Sci Technol
January 2025
College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China.
Wildland fires constitute a major source of ambient fine particulate matter (PM), significantly impacting air quality and public health. As the climate becomes warmer and drier, fire frequency is projected to rise, yet how the associated health impacts of fire-sourced PM (FPM) respond to climate change remains vague. In this study, we modeled the global concentration and associated premature deaths of FPM over the past two decades.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
January 2025
School of BioSciences, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Climate warming can induce a cost-of-living "squeeze" in ectotherms by increasing energetic expenditures while reducing foraging gains. We used biophysical models (validated by 2685 field observations) to test this hypothesis for 10 ecologically diverse lizards in African and Australian deserts. Historical warming (1950-2020) has been more intense in Africa than in Australia, translating to an energetic squeeze for African diurnal species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
January 2025
Sarawak Tropical Peat Research Institute, Kota Samarahan, Malaysia.
Tropical peatlands are significant sources of methane (CH₄), but their contribution to the global CH₄ budget remains poorly quantified due to the lack of long-term, continuous and high-frequency flux measurements. To address this gap, we measured net ecosystem CH exchange (NEE-CH) using eddy covariance technique throughout the conversion of a tropical peat swamp forest to an oil palm plantation. This encompassed the periods before, during and after conversion periods from 2014 to 2020, during which substantial environmental shifts were observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
January 2025
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60607, USA.
Changes in winter precipitation accompanying emerging climate trends lead to a major carbon-climate feedback from Arctic tundra. However, the mechanisms driving the direction, magnitude, and form (CO and CH) of C fluxes and derived climate forcing (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn N Y Acad Sci
January 2025
NewClimate Institute, Cologne, Germany.
Globally, more than 100 countries have adopted net-zero targets. Most studies agree on how this increases the chance of keeping end-of-century global warming below 2°C. However, they typically make assumptions about net-zero targets that do not capture uncertainties related to gas coverage, sector coverage, sinks, and removals.
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