Plants Produce Methane 77
CelticCoder writes "With wide implications in the fight against global warming, Phyorg.com is reporting that plants naturally produce methane. Since methane is twenty times more potent than carbon dioxide in trapping heat, are efforts to fight global warming by planting forests actually harming the environment?"
What's the proportions? (Score:1)
Methane not the 2nd most powerful greenhouse gas (Score:2)
This sits well with anyone who has ever spent a winter in the Canadian prairies. Cloudy nights are "warm", say -5 degrees C, whereas clear nights are cold, like -25 degrees C.
So we have to ban that dihydr [dhmo.org]
Re:What's the proportions? (Score:1)
Nature (Score:1, Informative)
Re: scientists (Score:1)
> ...thinking you know everything.
Much as I hate to feed the trolls...
Scientists don't think that they know everything. That's why they keep looking. How many of us could do the same thing? How many of us keep looking once we've found our car keys?
From TFA:
They had
Re:You fucking scientists, that's what you get for (Score:2)
Re:You fucking scientists, that's what you get for (Score:2)
On the other hand, there's plenty of loopholes (pun intended) in spacetime that you can use to effectively reach somewhere before a beam of light traveling in normal spacetime could.
Re:You fucking scientists, that's what you get for (Score:2)
Re:You fucking scientists, that's what you get for (Score:2)
If you let one object (gravitationally or magnetically) attract another object, the classical force between them approaches infinity. But they don't reach FTL speeds, do they? Force contracts
Much ado about very little (Score:3, Insightful)
Could plants be producing that much methane? It seems to me that if they needed to look that closely to prove that plant were producing methane at all, than the levels in question would not be that significant.
I don't mean to undervalue their research; it's actually quite fascinating that plants do this. However, I don't necessarily agree with the conclusion that plants cause global warming.
Re:Much ado about very little (Score:3, Interesting)
10 to 30 percent is a substantial fraction. Even if they're high by a factor of two, that's 5 to 15 percent, which is still substantial.
Re:Much ado about very little (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Much ado about very little (Score:3, Insightful)
But I too am skeptical that this contributes to global warming. Now, IANAGWKMAP (I am not a guy who knows much about plants) but they mention in the article that carbon dioxide is worse than methane (methane is in second place) for global warming. Plants take in carbon dioxide.
Re:Much ado about very little (Score:2)
Plants are, afterall, what gave us an oxygenated atmosphere in the first place (well, a large part was done by their ancesotrs the blue green algae). Methane is more absorbant but less stable than CO2 (carbon dioxide is an incredibly stable molecule thermodynamically, and the methane autooxidizes). Plants produce oxygen and CO2 as well (they burn sugar they produce with photosynthesis during the day when resting at night (no sunlight)... wh
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Much ado about very little (Score:2)
Naturally occurring or not, nothing says humanity has to survive it. You may be missing the point.
The cause to limit Global Warming is based on the threat to survival, not simply because its "unnatural"...perhaps you'd like to try living in a wild new climate - there are plenty to practice in.
Anyway, the question is moot. That era is now.
Re:Much ado about very little (Score:1)
I for one can't wait to see the day of man end. I imagine my bandwidth will increase by at least a magnitude of 2, latency should drop way down, and no more peak hours. I'll never get another spam or sales call. Hell, I may never have to see another advertisement again! Microsoft will cease to be an evil c
Re:Much ado about very little (Score:2)
Re:Much ado about very little (Score:2)
Re:Much ado about very little (Score:1)
And the question on everyone's mind ... (Score:1)
Re:And the question on everyone's mind ... (Score:3, Informative)
Those three sentences pretty much answer all of your questions. Given the last sentence, one can infer that all plants rele
From the article... (Score:2)
2) "Nowadays, methane in the atmosphere in fact is largely of biogenic origin."
For you subgeniuses out there, biogenic means (roughly) that it was made as a result of man, such as methane from crops and bovine farts.
It is quite unexpected that methane can be made in the presence of oxygen. However, politicians and corporate whores (some overlap there) will swiftly trumpet (as did the parent post): PLANTS
Re:From the article... (Score:1, Funny)
I challenge you to prove me wrong.
-> Fritz
Re:From the article... (Score:2)
Happily, my point still stands, even with the error. Even more happily, I'm not a fucking moron (at least by the parent's criterion.)
What he neglects to mention... (Score:5, Funny)
Plants a small piece of the pie (Score:5, Informative)
Honestly, I think the solution in the long term is technological in nature. 5 billion people are on their way to consuming as much as the 1 billion biggest consumers. In a utopia, we might be able to convince the big consumers to stop consuming that those who currently consume little to carry on not consuming. We don't live in that ideal world.
The solution is for the technologically advanced and rich nations of the world to work like hell to make the industrial revolution that the other 5 billion or so people are about to go through is cleaner then the one the Western world already had. There is no policy that can stop what is going to happen. The only hope that we have is to apply technology to mitigate and reverse the damage that has and will continue to be done.
I am not suggesting we blast pollution into the air because it is a lost cause. I am suggesting that in addition to taking restraint steps where we can, we work our hardest to find real solutions that are compatible with first world style living and environmental concerns. The sooner we recognize that as a species we WILL consume more as time goes on and recognize that the solution is two parts technology and one part restraint, the sooner we will find solution to these very real problems.
Re:Karma Whore (Score:2)
Problems and Solutions (Score:3, Interesting)
One company I interviewed at made specialized batteries in the US. For years, their batteries contained lead and some other more nasty chemicals. The EU passed some laws that in effect banned this company from selling their batteries while they had these chemicals. They explained to me that one of the major projects they were working on was redesi
Re:Problems and Solutions (Score:2)
Where, exactly, did you get the idea that America has great environmental laws? Few Americans have such illusions...
Re:Problems and Solutions (Score:2)
Re:Problems and Solutions (Score:1)
Re:Plants a small piece of the pie (Score:1)
I can imagine in 10,000 years the aliens... (Score:1)
"Those silly humans, they treat global warming by fighting fire with fire"
Practically speaking.. (Score:1)
Re: Practically speaking.. (Score:2)
Uhhh, I wasn't aware that we were dealing with the warming problem. Reducing greenhouse gas emissions will do nothing to stop global warming. That's the nature of a greenhouse, you point light at it and it will trap the heat. Reducing greenhouse gas emissions just stablizes the rate at which the heat is trapped. It doesn't decrease that rate and it doesn't reduce the heat that has already been captured.
We have a minimal understanding of nature (Score:4, Insightful)
We understand so little about weather and the atmosphere and global warming and our sun that to think that we even have an idea of how to reverse the process if it is happening to a significant degree, or to think that we even understand what is really causing it, is absurd.
This is the old blind men and the elephant story. One person thinks it is a spear. Another, a snake. Another, a tree. Another, a whip. Except this elephant is so large and so complicated that even with all of our eyes open and all of our technology looking into it, we still can't figure it out. One group says the earth is cooling. Another, warming. Another, it was too cold now it is coming back to normal. One group says we should stop burning fossil fuels. Another says we should stop burning fossil fuels uncleanly. Still others say that it doesn't matter how much or little CO2 we put out in the atmosphere, the earth tends to absorb it. Others say that the US is the cleanest country in the world because we allow market forces to handle the management of the environment, so we shouldn't regulate it at all but let people choose what they want to do or not do to protect it.
The weather is something beyond our understanding, so it's best that for right now, we attribute it to an Act of God. When we can understand enough about it that we can get an accurate picture and draw conclusive---and correct---results, then we can start taking responsibility for it.
Thank you sir, your check is in the mail! (Score:1, Insightful)
The trick is to figure out who the blind folk are (Michael Crichton, famous science fiction author), any "scientific" reports written or edited by oil lobbyists, vs. the 99% of top scientists who *agre
Re:Thank you sir, your check is in the mail! (Score:1)
Seeing as how all believers judge a scientist's worth by whether or not he agrees with global warming, you can just go ahead and claim "100% of top scientists". We really don't expect anything better out of your crowd...
And when are the oil companies going to pay ME for writing this stuff? I've been buying their gas for years now...
Re:Thank you sir, your check is in the mail! (Score:2)
Ok, how about we define scientists as...
the American Association of State Climatologists
or
the American Meteorological Society
or
the American Geophysical Union
or
the Geological Society of London
or
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
or
the Brazil National Academy of Science
or
the Canada Nati
Re:We have a minimal understanding of nature (Score:2)
Hah! After your second sentence I was thinking - I bet this guy believes in intelligent design, and then whammo!
Re:We have a minimal understanding of nature (Score:2)
And we seeing people have been telling you for years it's global warming.
Re:We have a minimal understanding of nature (Score:1)
Here's the parts of the elephant I haven't seen yet. Maybe you "seeing person" know the answers. Tell me, what percentage of the earth's temperatures are we measuring at any one point in time? How much of the temperature throughout earth's history do we know, and within what error range? When we talk about "average temperature" what do we really mean? The average of all measurements or the average of all temper
Re:We have a minimal understanding of nature (Score:2)
Oh boy, all of them? Could you be any less specific? Your question already shows you have no clue. And no, I am not going to waste my time trying to tell you why, because that would be futile.
Re:We have a minimal understanding of nature (Score:2)
Well, DUH.
Re:We have a minimal understanding of nature (Score:2)
Get this: there is a broad and deep consensus among the international scientific community that global warming is both real and largely responsible for the climate change we are now seeing (and which - thank God for irony - seems to have it in for the biggest atmospheric carbon emitting country in the world).
It is only the rich US elite and a few paid l
Ad hominem attacks (Score:1)
When you start your arguments with "My opponent is a fool", you are suddenly no longer arguing a counterpoint, and you
Re:Ad hominem attacks (Score:2)
I have researched it (Score:1)
25 years is not enough data to make any determinations, especially data collected so poorly and used so poorly.
We are not collecting enough dat
Re:Ad hominem attacks (Score:2)
Ice carries various substances suspended in frozen bubbles and in solution. Some of those substances can be used to date the ice fairly accurately. And some of those substances are greenhouse gases like CO2. Deep cores of polar ice have revealed the concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide at various points in the past.
Now Google for the following terms: polar ice cores CO2 OR "carbon dioxide".
The top link:
http://www.daviesand.com/Choices/Precautionary_Pla n [daviesand.com]
Ice Cores (Score:1)
Re:Ice Cores (Score:2)
2. This is a balanced scientific report. The paragraph you pointed out just shows honest scientists doing their job. They are not attempting to explain the mechanism, only reporting the basic data in a way t
Re:Ice Cores (Score:1)
Re:Ice Cores (Score:2)
Your asserting that doesn't actually make it true. Your paranoid remarks about the motivations of some nebulous group of scientists are subjective and lacking in any real content. Your point about error bars: the comparison with fundamental phhsics is spurious because we *need* to know the mass of the electron to an astounding degree of accuracy, but with this ice core data even an error of a few percent would hardly invalidate the
Error bars absolutely critical (Score:1)
My comparison to the mass of an electron is that when
Re:Error bars absolutely critical (Score:2)
2. We know that greenhouse gases will cause global warming. The question would have been how much and how fast. However we have been overtaken by events. Totally apart from the ice core data we have measurements of ocean temperature over a period of time, and we also have data on ice melting at the poles. We know the oceans are warming up. A reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, which are substantially larger than anything before industrial civil
Re:Error bars absolutely critical (Score:1)
The hurricanes weren't caused by global warming. No scientist is saying that. In fact, if I recall correctly, meteorologists said the exact opposite after the hurricanes hit.
We don't understand exactly how the global temperature affects the number of hurricanes produced each year and their severity. We do know that corrupt governments that waste the taxpayer's money intended to reinforce ancient levies do cause major disasters, however.
Concerning
Re:Error bars absolutely critical (Score:2)
What does this have to do with my original points? (Score:1)
I am not in the oil industry, but from what I can tell (ANWR) the lack of oil has more to do with the US government forbidding the extraction of newly found oil sites and less to do with there actually being less oil. In fact, I've read several articles saying that some oil sites in Louisiana have filled up again, and they are ext
Re:What does this have to do with my original poin (Score:2)
That crackpot theory about oil not being a fossil fuel smells like horseshit to me. The Russians are always at this crazy stuff. Twenty years ago you would have been all about how full of crap they were. But its the same crazy shit now that it was back then.
Well, now it's clear what we must do. (Score:1)
Not just the dog anymore! (Score:2)
Lungs of the Earth (Score:1)