Peatlands' potential to capture carbon upgraded as temperatures rise
2025-03-20
(Press-News.org)
According to a predictive model developed by a CNRS researcher1 and his European colleagues, the microalgae present in peat bogs could offset up to 14% of future CO2 emissions, thanks to their photosynthetic activity2. This conclusion was reached by basing the work on in situ experiments and the various predictive scenarios established by the IPCC. It is the first model to quantify the potential compensation of future CO2 emissions by peatlands on a global scale. This result lifts the veil on a currently ambiguous section of the terrestrial carbon cycle3 and its alterations by anthropogenic climate change. The associated study is published in Nature Climate Change.
Representing just 3% of the Earth's land surface, peatlands contain over 30% of the carbon retained in soils4 in the form of fossilised organic matter at depth. It is estimated that this stock represents between 500 and 1000 gigatons of carbon, corresponding to 56% and 112% of the total carbon present in the Earth's atmosphere5. While some soil micro-organisms emit CO2 through respiration, microalgae assimilate it, notably through photosynthesis. Any increase in temperature will stimulate this microbial photosynthesis, enhancing the CO2 capture potential of peatlands.
Regrettably, due to a lack of data, the mechanisms by which soil microalgae capture CO2 have not been incorporated into any climate projections to date. However, far from being negligible, this photosynthetic carbon fixation could mitigate the impact of climate change in the future.
Further work is needed – on this and other carbon assimilation processes carried out by the micro-organisms in peat bogs – to fully quantify the potential of these ecosystems as carbon sinks and improve accuracy. Nevertheless, preserving peatlands and reducing global CO2 emissions are still the best way of mitigating worsening climate change.
Notes
1 – From the Centre de recherche sur la biodiversité et l'environnement (CRBE, CNRS/UT/IRD/Toulouse INP).
2 – Photosynthesis is a phenomenon taking place within chlorophyll vegetables. Thanks to sunlight, theses plants absorb CO2 from the atmosphere and release dioxygen (O2).
3 – The carbon cycle regroups all transits of molecules containing carbon between soils, air and oceans on Earth.
4 – In addition to oceans, Earth soils also store large amounts of carbon naturally. It is stored there in various ways (hydrocarbons, in plants through photosynthesis, limestone rocks…).
5 – According to the NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory, the atmospheric CO2 concentration in 2023 was 419,31 ppm (Trends in Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide (2025)), which is equivalent to 893 gigatons of carbon.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-03-20
CAMBRIDGE, MA – The ability to generate high-quality images quickly is crucial for producing realistic simulated environments that can be used to train self-driving cars to avoid unpredictable hazards, making them safer on real streets.
But the generative AI techniques increasingly being used to produce such images have drawbacks. One popular type of model, called a diffusion model, can create stunningly realistic images but is too slow and computationally intensive for many applications. On the other hand, the autoregressive models that power LLMs like ChatGPT are much faster, but they ...
2025-03-20
Researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine, in collaboration with the Prevencasa free clinic in Tijuana, Mexico, have confirmed the presence of xylazine in the illicit drug supply at the U.S.-Mexico border. While xylazine remains less common in the Western U.S., border cities serve as key trafficking hubs and may have higher rates of emerging substances. The findings, published on March 20, 2025 in the Journal of Addiction Medicine, highlight the urgent need for public health intervention.
“Xylazine is a veterinary anesthetic that is not approved for human use and is increasingly detected alongside illicit fentanyl in parts of the United States ...
2025-03-20
Lithium-6 is essential for producing nuclear fusion fuel, but isolating it from the much more common isotope, lithium-7, usually requires liquid mercury, which is extremely toxic. Now, researchers have developed a mercury-free method to isolate lithium-6 that is as effective as the conventional method. The new method is presented March 20 in the Cell Press journal Chem.
“This is a step towards addressing a major roadblock to nuclear energy,” says chemist and senior author Sarbajit Banerjee of ETH Zürich and Texas A&M University. “Lithium-6 is a critical material for the renaissance of nuclear energy, ...
2025-03-20
Adverse genetic mutations can cause harm and are due to various circumstances. “Jumping genes” are one cause of mutations, but cells try and combat them with a specialized RNA called piRNA. For the first time, researchers from the University of Tokyo and their collaborators have identified how the sites responsible for piRNA production evolve effective behaviors against jumping genes. This research could lead to downstream diagnostic or therapeutic applications.
The word mutation can mean different things in different situations. ...
2025-03-20
About The Study: In this cohort study of patients with ovarian cancer, American Indian and Black patients were 23% less likely to have an elevated cancer antigen (CA)-125 level at diagnosis. Current CA-125 thresholds may miss racially and ethnically diverse patients with ovarian cancer. International guidelines use CA-125 thresholds to recommend which patients with pelvic masses should undergo evaluation by gynecologic oncologists for ovarian cancer. However, CA-125 thresholds were developed from white populations. Work is needed to develop inclusive CA-125 thresholds and ...
2025-03-20
About The Study: In this study, lifestyle changes after the pandemic were associated with an increase in the prevalence and severity of child astigmatisms, likely associated with changes in the developing cornea. The potential impact of higher degrees of astigmatism may warrant dedicated efforts to elucidate the relationship between environmental and/or lifestyle factors, as well as the pathophysiology of astigmatism.
Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding authors, email Jason C. Yam, MD (yamcheuksing@cuhk.edu.hk) and Li ...
2025-03-20
MIAMI, FLORIDA (STRICTLY EMBARGOED UNTIL MARCH 20, 2025, AT 11 A.M. EDT) – Since 2021, when lung cancer screening guidelines began to include younger people and those with a lower smoking history, the number of screenings climbed, but significant gaps remain, especially among people with limited access to healthcare, according to a new study led by researchers at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, part of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
"The updated guidelines substantially increased lung cancer screenings overall, even as ...
2025-03-20
A team of researchers from Cleveland Clinic Genomic Medicine share insights from an early set of 19,000 patients to receive immune checkpoint inhibitor treatments for colorectal cancer in the U.S.
The report comes from the laboratory of Stephanie Schmit, PhD, MPH, and was published in JAMA Network Open. It serves as an opportunity to better understand how immune checkpoint inhibitor treatments, including PD-1 and PD-L1 inhibitors, work in a larger population that reflects real-world settings. Dr. Schmit collaborated with a team of ...
2025-03-20
The earliest days after fertilization, once a sperm cell meets an egg, are shrouded in scientific mystery.
The process of how a humble single cell becomes an organism fascinates scientists across disciplines. For some animals, the entire process of cellular multiplication, generation of specialized cells, and their organization into an ordered multicellular embryo takes place in the protective environment of the uterus, making direct observation and studies challenging. This makes it difficult for scientists to understand what can go wrong during that process, and how specific risk factors and the surrounding environment may prevent ...
2025-03-20
Boston – An international team of clinical collaborators, led by physician scientists from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, performed a first-ever clinical test of the targeted therapy avapritinib in pediatric and young patients with a form of high-grade glioma. They found that the drug, already FDA-approved for certain adult cancers, was generally safe and resulted in tumor reduction visible on brain scans, as well as clinical improvement, in 3 out of 7 patients.
The study was published in Cancer Cell.
Pediatric-type high-grade gliomas are currently incurable brain tumors with median survival times less than 18 months after initial diagnosis.
Avapritinib ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Peatlands' potential to capture carbon upgraded as temperatures rise