by: Peter N. Spotts, The Christian Science Monitor
You
never know what you'll find until you dig a little deeper. Scientists
taking the measure of how much carbon the Arctic locks up beneath its
tundra have done just that. Based on what they've found, they estimate
that the Arctic could harbor an average of 60 percent more carbon than
previous estimates have indicated.
Researchers are interested in the Arctic's carbon budget
because projections of global warming suggest that the region's average
temperature could warm by as much as 6 degrees Celsius (10.8 degrees
Fahrenheit) by the end of the century, depending on the trajectory that
emissions from human activities take. The concern: As the Arctic
continues to warm and the permafrost thaws, significant amounts of
carbon will find their way into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide or
methane. These added greenhouse gases would serve to reinforce global
warming.
The results
come from a group led by University of Alaska at Fairbanks soil
scientist Chien-lu Ping and published in today's edition of Nature
Geoscience. Hints that the Arctic's tundra may lock up more carbon than
older, widely cited estimates had indicated date back at least to 2005.
For instance, a team led by Jeffery Welker at the University of Alaska
at Anchorage reported at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union
that in Greenland, it was finding between nine and 125 times the amount
of carbon previously reported, depending on the type of Arctic
landscape yielding the measurements.