The World's Largest Environmental Experiment 33
Roland Piquepaille writes "The Amazon in South America is more than a forest or an habitat. It's a climate regulator which has to absorb between 200 and 300 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions produced by the 8,000 square miles of destroyed forests every year. In 1998, the Brazilian community, helped by many international institutions, launched the Large Scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment (LBA). The LBA Experiment is made up of 120 projects, 61 of which are already complete. The status of these projects is currently being reviewed by 800 delegates from 170 Brazilian and foreign institutions at the III LBA Scientific Conference held in Brasilia between July 27 and 29. NASA says it plays a key role in the LBA experiment through the use of its satellites and its computer scientists. But Inter Press Service reports that the Mega-Amazon Research Project Holds Surprises -- Good and Bad: good because it provides opportunities for 400 researchers to work on postgraduate studies in the area, bad because it's still not known if the forests absorb enough carbon to compensate the emissions caused by deforestation, therefore contributing to global warming. Please read this overview for more details, references and a map of the LBA sites spanning the Amazon."
Moo (Score:2)
This makes me wonder. How can 800 delefgaters agree on anything? Sure, their intentions may be right, but wouldn't a group of closer to five or may be ten people be better?
Perhaps, this ought to be interesting.
Re:Moo (Score:2)
Mythical Man Month or Congressional Record? Either could lead you to this conclusion, so I'm curious.
Re:Moo (Score:2)
But C-SPAN is so much more *fun*.
Re:Moo (Score:3, Interesting)
Why would they all need to agree on anything? This being science, a rough consensus on tentative conclusions and furthur efforts needed would be the reasonable expectation.
Sure, their intentions may be right, but wouldn't a group of closer to five or may be ten people be better?
Five to ten people to review the status of 120 projects, conducted along a river that is over 6,000 km long and up to 10 km wide? (Of course, that's just the
Re:Moo (Score:2)
The problem is that there ends up being 800 *separate* people. Ten people are more likely to come to a consensus, or at least see each other's points.
Re:Moo (Score:1)
Re:Moo (Score:2)
Bad Surprises (Score:2)
I would hope the amount of carbon absorbed was not known, otherwise there wouldn't be much need for the experiment.
Subject: Sad news ... Francis Crick, dead at 88 (Score:2, Informative)
Forests (Score:4, Insightful)
This is a classic case of "Do like I say, not like I do".
Looked at N. America lately? (Score:1)
We could do more, beginning with discouraging (instead of subsidizing) excess agricultural production and returning that land to fore
Re:Looked at N. America lately? (Score:2)
What's the ratio of forests to tree farms? That ratio may be relevant, as I'd guess that tree farms probably aren't nearly as goo
Forests vs. tree farms (Score:2, Interesting)
People like to live among trees. How do
Re:Looked at N. America lately? (Score:2)
Re:Looked at N. America lately? (Score:1)
But what happens to the carbon?
The carbon locked in a tree farm's wood gets harvested. If it becomes building material and is sealed inside a wall then that carbon has been removed from the atmosphere. If a tree falls in the forest and rots, some of that carbon is released to the atmosphere.
Re:Forests (Score:2)
Given today's employment problems in Oregon, I'd vote for an old true conservationist conservative in a split second. Just imagine telling all t
Re:Forests (Score:1)
North American deforestation has had many downsides. Human beings, regardless of the continent, are advised to not make the same mistakes.
Plankton (Score:5, Insightful)
Please correct me if I'm wrong but it seems that the sheer volume of the oceans supports the idea. Between the plant life filling that volume and the fact that the water itself dissolves a good deal of CO2, it seems like promoting artificial blooms of plankton and algae would sink a lot more carbon.
Re:Plankton (Score:2)
I don't know whether you're wrong or not, but I don't think you can simply count the sheer volume of the oceans. (1) There is insufficient sunlight penetration for photosynthesis below about 200 meters and (
Plankton fix carbon after oceans absorb it (Score:1)
Adding CO2 means reducing alkalinity, which makes carbonate less stable in the oceans. This may have serious effects on marine organisms which use carbonate in their skeletons; see here [sunherald.com] for a brief news item. Science News has run several articles on the subject, but non
Iron (Score:2)
North America is also a huge carbon sink. [noaa.gov]
Not just iron (Score:2, Informative)
The carbon-uptake of N. American landmass may be due in large part to the adoption of zero-till farming [google.com]; here is an article on it. [soilcc.ca]
Re:Not just iron (Score:1)
Remember to ask for support of claims that the temperature history resembles a hockey stick, that there is significant warming, and that climate simulations show how the real world behaves. [greeningearthsociety.org]
Watch for self-interest too (Score:1)
Re:Watch for self-interest too (Score:1)
You may have trouble finding it on IPCC pages, as the IPCC states it is interested in human-caused warming. So be careful what you look for from them too.
Re:Watch for self-interest too (Score:2)
I'm particularly interested in the sources of funding for this research. Research sponsored by the coal and oil industries can be expected to be suppressed if it supports actions contrary to their interests. (One would also expect research sponsored by left/socialist organizations to be suppressed if it didn't support their agenda, which may be neutral or anti-corporate.)
If the IPCC's research is as y
Re:Watch for self-interest too (Score:1)
Here's the hard part: Hold down that left mouse button and highlight what you think might be the title of the paper. Then let go of that mouse button.
After a nap, try Control-C to copy the title. Go to Google and use Control-V to insert the title. Put it inside quotation marks ("). Click Search.
Altitude dependence [google.com]
Beg to differ... (Score:1)
The World's Largest Environmental Experiment is humanity living on Earth. Period. We use, abuse and expell. Someday this planet of ours will be un-inhabitable if we keep on going the way we are...
Answer To The Largest Experiment (Score:1)
Grain of Salt (Score:2)
Note to moderators: I'm not sure myself if this is an insight or a cheap joke.
Half-truths and other nonsense (Score:3, Informative)
Go read some more on ocean chemistry and biology folks...
I'd explain GEOCARB II, but I don't think most people want to hear anout the modelling side of things!