PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers: Permafrost thawing could accelerate global warming

2014-04-07
(Press-News.org) TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A team of researchers lead by Florida State University have found new evidence that permafrost thawing is releasing large quantities of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere via plants, which could accelerate warming trends.

The research is featured in the newest edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"We've known for a while now that permafrost is thawing," said Suzanne Hodgkins, the lead author on the paper and a doctoral student in chemical oceanography at Florida State. "But what we've found is that the associated changes in plant community composition in the polar regions could lead to way more carbon being released into the atmosphere as methane."

Permafrost is soil that is frozen year round and is typically located in polar regions. As the world has gotten slightly warmer, that permafrost is thawing and decomposing, which is producing increased amounts of methane.

Relative to carbon dioxide, methane has a disproportionately large global warming potential. Methane is 33 times more effective at warming the Earth on a mass basis and a century time scale relative to carbon dioxide.

As the plants break down, they are releasing carbon into the atmosphere. And if the permafrost melts entirely, there would be five times the amount of carbon in the atmosphere than there is now, said Jeff Chanton, the John Widmer Winchester Professor of Oceanography at Florida State.

"The world is getting warmer, and the additional release of gas would only add to our problems," he said.

Chanton and Hodgkins' work, "Changes in peat chemistry associated with permafrost thaw increase greenhouse gas production," was funded by a three-year, $400,000 Department of Energy grant. They traveled to Sweden multiple times to collect soil samples for the study.

The research is a multicontinent effort with researchers from North America, Europe and Australia all contributing to the work.

INFORMATION:


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New research suggests connection between white matter and cognitive health

2014-04-07
LEXINGTON, Ky. (April 7, 2014) -- A multidisciplinary group of scientists from the Sanders-Brown Center on Aging at the University of Kentucky have identified an interesting connection between the health of the brain tissue that supports cognitive functioning and the presence of dementia in adults with Down syndrome. Published in the Neurobiology of Aging, the study, which focused on detecting changes in the white matter connections of the brain, offers tantalizing potential for the identification of biomarkers connected to the development of dementia, including Alzheimer's ...

Well-known cancer gene NRAS produces 5 variants, study finds

2014-04-07
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new study shows that a gene discovered 30 years ago and now known to play a fundamental role in cancer development produces five different gene variants (called isoforms), rather than just the one original form, as thought. The study of the NRAS gene by researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC – James) identified four previously unknown variants that the NRAS gene produces. The finding might help improve drugs for cancers in which aberrant ...

Penn researcher finds mortality risks of being overweight or obese are underestimated

2014-04-07
New research by Andrew Stokes, a doctoral student in demography and sociology in the School of Arts and Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania, suggests that many obesity studies substantially underestimate the mortality risks associated with excess weight in the United States. His study, "Using Maximum Weight to Redefine Body Mass Index Categories in Studies of The Mortality Risks of Obesity," was published in the March issue of the open-access journal Population Health Metrics. "The scholarly community is divided over a large meta-analysis that found that overweight ...

BOSS quasars track the expanding universe -- most precise measurement yet

BOSS quasars track the expanding universe -- most precise measurement yet
2014-04-07
The Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS), the largest component of the third Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-III), pioneered the use of quasars to map density variations in intergalactic gas at high redshifts, tracing the structure of the young universe. BOSS charts the history of the universe's expansion in order to illuminate the nature of dark energy, and new measures of large-scale structure have yielded the most precise measurement of expansion since galaxies first formed. The latest quasar results combine two separate analytical techniques. A new kind ...

Trees go high-tech: Process turns cellulose into energy storage devices

Trees go high-tech: Process turns cellulose into energy storage devices
2014-04-07
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Based on a fundamental chemical discovery by scientists at Oregon State University, it appears that trees may soon play a major role in making high-tech energy storage devices. OSU chemists have found that cellulose – the most abundant organic polymer on Earth and a key component of trees – can be heated in a furnace in the presence of ammonia, and turned into the building blocks for supercapacitors. These supercapacitors are extraordinary, high-power energy devices with a wide range of industrial applications, in everything from electronics to automobiles ...

Beans, peas, lentils can significantly reduce 'bad cholesterol' and risk of heart disease

2014-04-07
Eating just 1 serving daily of legumes such as beans, chickpeas, lentils and peas can significantly reduce "bad cholesterol" and the risk of heart disease, found a study published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). High cholesterol levels are associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease, yet they are modifiable through diet and other lifestyle choices. Most chronic disease prevention guidelines recommend consumption of non–oil-seed legumes (dietary pulses) such as beans, chickpeas, lentils and peas along with other vegetables and fruits as part ...

Daily serving of beans, peas, chickpeas or lentils can significantly reduce bad cholesterol

Daily serving of beans, peas, chickpeas or lentils can significantly reduce bad cholesterol
2014-04-07
TORONTO, April 7, 2014—Eating one serving a day of beans, peas, chickpeas or lentils can significantly reduce "bad cholesterol" and therefore the risk of cardiovascular disease, a new study has found. However, most people in North America would have to more than double their consumption of these foods known as pulses to reach that target, said the researchers at St. Michael's Hospital. The study, led by Dr. John Sievenpiper of the hospital's Clinical Nutrition and Risk Factor Modification Centre, was published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. Dr. ...

Personal touch signature makes mobile devices more secure

Personal touch signature makes mobile devices more secure
2014-04-07
Passwords, gestures and fingerprint scans are all helpful ways to keep a thief from unlocking and using a cell phone or tablet. Cybersecurity researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology have gone a step further. They've developed a new security system that continuously monitors how a user taps and swipes a mobile device. If the movements don't match the owner's tendencies, the system recognizes the differences and can be programmed to lock the device. The new system is called LatentGesture and was used during a Georgia Tech lab study using Android devices. The ...

Rebar technique strengthens case for graphene

2014-04-07
Carbon nanotubes are reinforcing bars that make two-dimensional graphene much easier to handle in a new hybrid material grown by researchers at Rice University. The Rice lab of chemist James Tour set nanotubes into graphene in a way that not only mimics how steel rebar is used in concrete but also preserves and even improves the electrical and mechanical qualities of both. The technique should make large, flexible, conductive and transparent sheets of graphene much easier to manipulate, which should be of interest to electronics manufacturers, Tour said. He suggested ...

Southwestern bird and reptile distributions to shift as climate changes

2014-04-07
Dramatic distribution losses and a few major distribution gains are forecasted for southwestern bird and reptile species as the climate changes, according to just-published research by scientists with the U.S. Geological Survey, the University of New Mexico, and Northern Arizona University. Overall, the study forecasted species distribution losses – that is, where species are able to live – of nearly half for all but one of the 5 reptile species they examined, including for the iconic chuckwalla. The threatened Sonoran (Morafka's) desert tortoise, however, is projected ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Models predict severity of pneumonia in kids to help guide treatment

Mindfulness course effective in people with difficult-to-treat depression

Insurer exits after the Inflation Reduction Act Part D redesign

Researchers gain insights into the brain’s ‘dimmer switch’

Brain scans reveal what happens in the mind when insight strikes

Loss of Medicare Part D subsidy linked to higher mortality among low-income older adults

Persistent mucus plugs linked to faster decline in lung function for patients with COPD

Incomplete team staffing, burnout, and work intentions among US physicians

The key to spotting dyslexia early could be AI-powered handwriting analysis

New nanoparticle could make cancer treatment safer, more effective

A new study provides insights into cleaning up noise in quantum entanglement

Artificial intelligence and genetics can help farmers grow corn with less fertilizer

Daratumumab may help cancer patients with low physical function to live longer, study finds

Stranger things: How Netflix teaches economics

Energy and memory: A new neural network paradigm

How we think about protecting data

AAN issues Evidence in Focus article on Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene therapy

Could a mini-stroke leave lasting fatigue?

Is it time to redefine the public health workforce? New research proposes a broader, more inclusive approach

Tiny gas bubbles reveal secrets of Hawaiian volcanoes

Gelada monkeys understand complex "conversations" involving distress calls and prosocial comforting responses, exhibiting surprise when such vocal exchanges are manipulated to violate their expectatio

New poison dart frog discovered in the Amazon's Juruá River basin is blue with copper-colored legs, and represents one of just two novel Ranitomeya species in a decade

Shifting pollution abroad is a major reason why democratic countries are rated more environmentally friendly compared to non-democratic states

Groups of AI agents spontaneously form their own social norms without human help, suggests study

Different ways of ‘getting a grip’

Handy octopus robot can adapt to its surroundings

The ripple effect of small earthquakes near major faults

Mass General Brigham researchers pinpoint ‘sweet spot’ for focused ultrasound to provide essential tremor relief

MRI scans could help detect life-threatening heart disease

NASA’s Magellan mission reveals possible tectonic activity on Venus

[Press-News.org] Researchers: Permafrost thawing could accelerate global warming