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

Nutrient-rich forests absorb more carbon

2014-04-14
(Press-News.org) The ability of forests to sequester carbon from the atmosphere depends on nutrients available in the forest soils, shows new research from an international team of researchers including the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA). The study showed that forests growing in fertile soils with ample nutrients are able to sequester about 30% of the carbon that they take up during photosynthesis. In contrast, forests growing in nutrient-poor soils may retain only 6% of that carbon. The rest is returned to the atmosphere as respiration. "This paper produces the first evidence that to really understand the carbon cycle, you have to look into issues of nutrient cycling within the soil," says IIASA Ecosystems Services and Management Program Director Michael Obersteiner, who worked on the study as part of a new international research project sponsored by the European Research Council. Marcos Fernandez-Martinez, first author of the paper and researcher at the Center for Ecological Research and Forestry Applications (CREAF) and the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) says, "In general, nutrient-poor forests spend a lot of energy—carbon—through mechanisms to acquire nutrients from the soil, whereas nutrient-rich forests can use that carbon to enhance biomass production." Until now, scientific models to predict forest carbon sequestration on a global scale had only considered the amount of nitrogen in the soil and did not take into account other constraints such as phosphorus or the pH of the soil, which is related to the availability of nutrients. The new study includes both those factors as well as nitrogen availability, in an analysis synthesizing data from 92 forests in different climate zones on the planet. Tropical rainforests had the poorest nutrient availability, and the lowest efficiency for carbon sequestration, the researchers found. The researchers believe that the difference in efficiency of carbon absorption could be due to several factors. For one thing, plants in nutrient-poor soils devote more energy to locating nutrients. "When plants are in nutrient poor conditions, they send out more roots and produce chemicals that can help dissolve nutrients from the soil. This takes energy, though, and so the plants produce less biomass," says Obersteiner. Furthermore, the study showed that nutrient-rich ecosystems also generally have more stable ground organic material, which is not easily degraded, and thus retains more carbon. INFORMATION: The new study is part of the ERC Synergy Grant, IMBALANCE-P. Researchers from the project on the paper incude: Josep Peñuelas, CSIC, Ivan Janssens, the Universiteit Antwerpen ( Belgium) Philippe Ciais , the Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l' Environnement (France) and Michael Obersteiner from IIASA. The article also includes the participation of other centers such as the University of Barcelona, the Institute of Arctic Biology , University of Alaska ( Alaska), the Environmental Change Institute of the University of Oxford ( USA ), the DIBAF , University of Tuscia (Italy ), the College of Urban and Environmental Sciences of Peking University ( China), Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research (China ) and the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry (Germany ). Reference M. Fernández-Martínez, S. Vicca, I. A. Janssens, J. Sardans, S. Luyssaert, M. Campioli, F. S. Chapin III, P. Ciais, Y. Malhi, M. Obersteiner, D. Papale, S. L. Piao, M. Reichstein, F. Rodà & J. Peñuelas (2014). Nutrient availability as the key regulator of global forest carbon balance. Nature Climate Change. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2177

For more information please contact: Michael Obersteiner
Program Director
Ecosystems Services and Management
+43(0) 2236 807 460
oberstei@iiasa.ac.at

Katherine Leitzell
IIASA Press Office
Tel: +43 2236 807 316
Mob: +43 676 83 807 316
leitzell@iiasa.ac.at

About IIASA: IIASA is an international scientific institute that conducts research into the critical issues of global environmental, economic, technological, and social change that we face in the twenty-first century. Our findings provide valuable options to policy makers to shape the future of our changing world. IIASA is independent and funded by scientific institutions in Africa, the Americas, Asia, Oceania, and Europe. http://www.iiasa.ac.at


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists open door to better solar cells, superconductors and hard-drives

2014-04-14
Using DESY's bright research light sources, scientists have opened a new door to better solar cells, novel superconductors and smaller hard-drives. The research reported in the scientific journal Nature Communications this week enhances the understanding of the interface of two materials, where completely new properties can arise. With their work, the team of Prof. Andrivo Rusydi from the National University of Singapore and Prof. Michael Rübhausen from the Hamburg Center for Free-Electron Laser Science (CFEL) have solved a long standing mystery in the physics of condensed ...

Combs of light accelerate communication

Combs of light accelerate communication
2014-04-14
This news release is available in German. Miniaturized optical frequency comb sources allow for transmission of data streams of several terabits per second over hundreds of kilometers – this has now been demonstrated by researchers of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) and the Swiss École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in a experiment presented in the journal Nature Photonics. The results may contribute to accelerating data transmission in large computing centers and worldwide communication networks. (DOI: 10.1038/NPHOTON.2014.57.) The amount of ...

Proteomics International biomarker study closer to a CDx test for diabetic kidney disease

2014-04-14
April 2014, Perth, Australia. Drug discovery company Proteomics International has completed an important milestone towards the development of a companion diagnostic (CDx) test with the validation of several of its protein biomarkers. The research team authenticated the panel of biomarkers after taking 508 highly curated disease and control samples. Seven biomarkers were validated at high stringency using the company's proprietary mass spectrometry approach. The mass spectrometry data was then cross-validated using immunoassays in collaboration with the KTH Royal Institute ...

Beneficial organisms react differently to parasite drug

2014-04-14
The substance ivermectin has been used for more than thirty years all over the world to combat parasites like roundworms, lice and mites in humans, livestock and pets. The active ingredient belongs to the chemical group of avermectins, which generally disrupt cell transport and thus attack pests. When ivermectin is excreted in the faeces of treated animals, at overly high doses it also harms dung-degrading beneficial insects like dung beetles and dung flies. This impairs the functioning of the ecosystem. In extreme cases the dung is not decomposed and the pasture is destroyed. Sensitivity ...

Does germ plasm accelerate evolution?

2014-04-14
Scientists at The University of Nottingham have published research in the leading academic journal Science that challenges a long held belief about the way certain species of vertebrates evolved. Dr Matt Loose and Dr Andrew Johnson who are experts in genetics and cell development in the School of Life Sciences carried out the research, funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC). It suggests that genes evolve more rapidly in species containing germ plasm. The results came about as they put to the test a novel theory that early developmental events dramatically alter ...

Novel technique developed by NUS scientists opens door to better solar cells

Novel technique developed by NUS scientists opens door to better solar cells
2014-04-14
A team of scientists, led by Assistant Professor Andrivo Rusydi from the Department of Physics at the National University of Singapore's (NUS) Faculty of Science, has successfully developed a technique to study the interface between materials, shedding light on the new properties that arise when two materials are put together. With a better understanding of how materials interface, scientists can tweak the properties of different materials more easily, and this opens doors to the development of better solar cells, novel superconductors and smaller hard drives. The ...

Stanford team develops single cell genomics technique to reverse engineer developing lung

Stanford team develops single cell genomics technique to reverse engineer developing lung
2014-04-14
Consider the marvel of the embryo. It begins as a glob of identical cells that change shape and function as they multiply to become the cells of our lungs, muscles, nerves and all the other specialized tissues of the body. Now, in a feat of reverse tissue engineering, Stanford researchers have begun to unravel the complex genetic coding that allows embryonic cells to proliferate and transform into all of the specialized cells that perform a myriad of different biological tasks. A team of interdisciplinary researchers took lung cells from the embryos of mice, choosing ...

Saturn's hexagon: An amazing phenomenon

Saturns hexagon: An amazing phenomenon
2014-04-14
In 1980 and 1981 NASA's Voyager 1 and 2 space probes passed for the first time over the planet Saturn, located 1,500 million km from the Sun. Among their numerous discoveries they observed a strange, hexagon-shaped structure in the planet's uppermost clouds surrounding its north pole. The hexagon remained virtually static, without moving, vis-à-vis the planet's overall rotation that was not accurately known. What is more, the images captured by the Voyager probes found that the clouds were moving rapidly inside the hexagon in an enclosed jet stream and were being dragged ...

Longer nurse tenure on hospital units leads to higher quality care

Longer nurse tenure on hospital units leads to higher quality care
2014-04-14
(NEW YORK, NY, April 14, 2014) – When it comes to the cost and quality of hospital care, nurse tenure and teamwork matters. Patients get the best care when they are treated in units that are staffed by nurses who have extensive experience in their current job, according to a study from researchers at Columbia University School of Nursing and Columbia Business School. The study was published in the current issue of the American Economics Journal: Applied Economics. The review of more than 900,000 patient admissions over four years at hospitals in the Veterans Administration ...

Chemotherapy before or after surgery for high-risk bladder cancer improves survival, but is not routinely administered

2014-04-14
Contrary to treatment guidelines for high-risk bladder cancer, chemotherapy before or after surgery is not commonly used in routine clinical practice. The findings are published early online in Cancer, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. Clinical trials have shown that survival is improved in patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer who are given chemotherapy before surgery. There is less evidence about whether chemotherapy after surgery also improves survival. To investigate the use of peri-operative chemotherapy in this disease, Christopher Booth, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Consequences of overplanting rootworm-resistant maize in the US Corn Belt

The distinct role of Earth’s orbit in 100-thousand-year glacial cycles

Genome-based phylogeny resolves complicated Molluscan family tree

Studying locusts in virtual reality challenges models of collective behavior

ACC, AHA issue new acute coronary syndromes guideline

Scientists match Earth’s ice age cycles with orbital shifts

Quantum interference in molecule-surface collisions

Discovery of a common ‘weapon’ used by disease-causing fungi could help engineer more resilient food crops

University of Oklahoma researcher to create new coding language, computing infrastructure

NASA’s Hubble provides bird’s-eye view of Andromeda galaxy’s ecosystem

New ocelot chip makes strides in quantum computing

Computing leaders propose measures to combat tech-facilitated intimate partner violence, human trafficking, and child exploitation

Sometimes, when competitors collaborate, everybody wins

EU Flagship project DORIAN GRAY to use pioneering AI and avatar technology to uncover links between cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to improve healthy ageing and survi

SHEA encourages rescheduling postponed Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) Meeting

Study proposes a new theoretical framework for understanding complex higher-order networks

Archaeology: Vesuvian ash cloud turned brain to glass

When birds lose the ability to fly, their bodies change faster than their feathers

Genetic switch could help control leaf growth in poor soils

Virtual breastfeeding support may expand breastfeeding among new mothers

Homicide rates across county, race, ethnicity, age, and sex in the US

Prevalence and control of diabetes among US adults

Sleep trajectories and all-cause mortality among low-income adults

The invisible complication: Experts at ACS Summit address surgical adhesions and their hidden costs

Stem cell transplant clears clinical safety hurdle for the treatment of wet age-related macular degeneration

MSU forges strategic partnership to solve the mystery of how planets are formed

AAIF2025 conference: International actin conference with comprehensive topics

ASU forges new strategic partnership to solve the mystery of how planets are formed

Researchers demonstrate laser writing with unprecedented speed and resolution

New combination treatment strategy dramatically increases cell death in leukemia

[Press-News.org] Nutrient-rich forests absorb more carbon