Trees
across the tropics are getting bigger and offering help in the fight
against climate change, scientists have discovered.
A laborious study of the girth of 70,000 trees across
Africa has shown that tropical forests are soaking up more carbon
dioxide pollution than originally thought. Almost one-fifth of our
fossil fuel emissions are absorbed by forests across Africa, Amazonia
and Asia, the research suggests.
Simon Lewis, climate expert at the University of Leeds, who
led the study, said: "We are receiving a free subsidy from nature.
Tropical forests are absorbing 18% of the CO2 added to the atmosphere
each year from burning fossil fuels."
The study, published tomorrow in Nature, measured trees in
79 areas of intact forest across 10 African countries from Liberia to
Tanzania, and compared records going back 40 years. "On average the
trees are getting bigger," Lewis said.
Compared to the 1960s, each hectare of intact African
forest has trapped an extra 0.6 tonnes of carbon a year. Over the
world's tropical forests, this extra "carbon sink" effect adds up to
4.8bn tonnes of CO2 removed each year - close to the total carbon
dioxide emissions from the US.
Although individual trees are known to soak up carbon as
they photosynthesise and grow, large patches of mature forest were once
thought to be carbon neutral, with the carbon absorbed by new trees
balanced by that released as old trees die.