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

Limiting greenhouse gas emissions from land use in Europe

2013-04-10
(Press-News.org) EGU Press Conference, Wednesday, 10 April-- Not only do humans emit greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, but they also do things that help remove these gases from the atmosphere—for example, planting more forests or other land management techniques can lead to greater uptake of greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. New research presented by IIASA researcher Hannes Böttcher at the EGU General Assembly this week estimates future land use emissions for the European Union. These scenarios provide the basis for policy discussions in the EU, and also help identify the least costly mitigation options for addressing climate change in Europe.

The new estimates, which are based on an integrated modeling framework that combines information about population, economics, and land use and land productivity, show that Europe could potentially reduce greenhouse gas emissions from land use by more than 60% by 2050. The study showed that the biggest mitigation potential lies in cutting emissions from agriculture such as livestock production, as well as in managing forests effectively to increase their role as a carbon sink.

While the study specifically addresses European emissions, the researchers also looked at how mitigation efforts in Europe would affect land use and emissions outside of Europe. For example, if Europe reduces cropland in order to grow more forests, the food that is no longer grown will likely instead be grown somewhere outside of Europe. Mitigation measures in the land use sector are therefore likely to change also the productivity of the sector in Europe.

"If we assume that demand doesn't change," says Böttcher, "to satisfy demand, the production will move outside of Europe to a large degree." This movement is known as a leakage effect. The researchers calculated that this leakage effect would reduce the effectiveness of European mitigation efforts by up to 20%.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Reliability of neuroscience research questioned

2013-04-10
New research has questioned the reliability of neuroscience studies, saying that conclusions could be misleading due to small sample sizes. A team led by academics from the University of Bristol reviewed 48 articles on neuroscience meta-analysis which were published in 2011 and concluded that most had an average power of around 20 per cent – a finding which means the chance of the average study discovering the effect being investigated is only one in five. The paper, being published in Nature Reviews Neuroscience today [10 April], reveals that small, low-powered studies ...

Botanists in the rainforest

2013-04-10
This press release is available in German. Fruit-eating animals are known to use their spatial memory to relocate fruit, yet, it is unclear how they manage to find fruit in the first place. Researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, have now investigated which strategies chimpanzees in the Taï National Park in Côte d'Ivoire, West Africa, use in order to find fruit in the rain forest. The result: Chimpanzees know that trees of certain species produce fruit simultaneously and use this botanical knowledge during their daily ...

Ludwig presents advancements in immunotherapy and epigenetics at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting

2013-04-10
April 10, 2013, New York, NY – A dozen Ludwig scientists from around the world presented the latest advancements in basic and clinical cancer research at this week's American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2013. Progress in immunotherapy and epigenetics led the program with important diagnostic and treatment implications for emerging cancer therapy. "With new immunotherapy agents available to help patients with melanoma, researchers are developing prognostic biomarkers to determine who will benefit most to fully realize the potential of these ...

World-first research will save koalas

2013-04-10
The "holy grail" for understanding how and why koalas respond to infectious diseases has been uncovered in an Australian-led, world-first genome mapping project. The joint undertaking between QUT (Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia) and The Australian Museum has unearthed a wealth of data, including the koala interferon gamma (IFN-g) gene - a chemical messenger that plays a key role in the iconic marsupial's defence against cancer, viruses and intracellular bacteria. Professor Peter Timms, from QUT's Institue of Health and Biomedical Innovation ...

Fighting disease from within the mosquito: New techniques to help halt the spread of disease

2013-04-10
Scientists have revealed a new technique to introduce disease-blocking bacteria into mosquitoes, with promising results that may halt the spread of diseases such as dengue, yellow fever and potentially malaria. When infected with the bacteria Wolbachia, mosquitoes are unable to spread viruses such as dengue, a disease which kills round 40,000 people each year with no vaccines or specific treatments currently available. There have been around 2,400 cases of dengue infection in Northern Australia in recent years. However, the bacteria has been difficult to spread within ...

Unusual anal fin offers new insight into evolution

2013-04-10
An unusual fossil fish that has fins behind its anus could have implications for human evolution according to a scientist at The University of Manchester. Dr Robert Sansom from the Faculty of Life Sciences identified the paired fins of Euphanerops, a fossil jawless fish that swam in the seas around 370 million years ago. The find makes the fish one of the first vertebrate to develop paired appendages such as fins, legs or arms. However, their positioning is incredibly unusual, as Dr Sansom explains: "Euphanerops is unique because its anal fin is paired meaning there ...

Protected wildlife areas are 'welcome mats' for UK's bird newcomers

2013-04-10
A new study by scientists at the University of York and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) shows that bird species which have colonised the UK in recent decades breed initially almost exclusively in nature reserves and other areas specially protected for wildlife. First author, Jonathan Hiley, a PhD student in the Department of Biology at York, said: "Nature reserves provide ecological welcome mats for new arrivals." Published online in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B., the study shows that, of the 20 wetland bird species that bred for ...

Fit people have a better attention span than those with bad physical health

2013-04-10
New scientific evidence seems to confirm the famous Roman saying "Mens sana in corpore sano". Researchers from the University of Granada have demonstrated that people who normally practice sport have a better cognitive performance than those with bad physical health. More specifically, the results of this research indicate that the former have a better sustained attention span (they react more rapidly to an external stimulus introduced randomly while carrying out a monotonous task). Their autonomic nervous system also appears to work better when dealing with cognitive loads ...

ALBA Synchrotron used for first time as a microscope to determine protein structure

2013-04-10
A team led by David Reverter, a researcher at the Institute of Biotechnology and Biomedicine (IBB) of the UAB, has determined for the first time the three-dimensional structure of a protein pair: LC8 and Nek9. Depending on whether or not they bind, Nek9 ensures that the chromosomes group and separate correctly during cell division. By analysing the 3D structure, these scientists have discovered a new mechanism that interferes with the protein binding and therefore also contributes to the correct regulation of cell division and other cell processes. The discovery could ...

Ocean nutrients a key component of future change say scientists

2013-04-10
Variations in nutrient availability in the world's oceans could be a vital component of future environmental change, according to a multi-author review paper involving the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton (NOCS). The paper, published this month in Nature Geoscience, reviews what we know about ocean nutrient patterns and interactions, and how they might be influenced by future climate change and other man-made factors. The authors also highlight how nutrient cycles influence climate by fuelling biological production, hence keeping carbon dioxide (CO2) locked ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Learning about public consensus on climate change does little to boost people’s support for action, study shows

Sylvester Cancer Tip Sheet for January 2026

The Global Ocean Ship-Based Hydrographic Investigations Program (GO-SHIP) receives the Ocean Observing Team Award

Elva Escobar Briones selected for The Oceanography Society Mentoring Award

Why a life-threatening sedative is being prescribed more often for seniors

Findings suggest that certain medications for Type 2 diabetes reduce risk of dementia

UC Riverside scientists win 2025 Buchalter Cosmology Prize

SETI Institute opens call for nominations for the 2026 Tarter Award

Novel theranostic model shows curative potential for gastric and pancreatic tumors

How beige fat keeps blood pressure in check

Fossils reveal ‘latitudinal traps’ that increased extinction risk for marine species

Review: The opportunities and risks of AI in mental health research and care

New map reveals features of Antarctic’s ice-covered landscape

Beige fat promotes healthy vascular function and blood pressure in mice

Chronic low-dose pesticide exposure reduces the life span of wild lake fish, China-based study shows

Tiny earthquakes reveal hidden faults under Northern California

Long-term pesticide exposure accelerates aging and shortens lifespan in fish

Professor Tae-Woo Lee's research group develops groundbreaking perovskite display technology demonstrating the highest efficiency and industry-level operational lifetime

The “broker” family helps tidy up the cell

Ecology: Mummified cheetahs discovery gives hope for species’ Arabic reintroduction

Researchers survey the ADHD coaching boom

Air pollution and cardiac remodeling and function in patients with breast cancer

Risk of suicide in patients with traumatic injuries

Post–intensive care syndrome

The lifesaving potential of opioid abatement funds

The Frontiers of Knowledge Award goes to Allan MacDonald and Pablo Jarillo-Herrero for their discovery of the “magic angle” enabling science to transform and control the behavior of new materials

Discovery reveals how keto diet can prevent seizures when drugs fail

JMIR Publications and Sikt announce pilot flat-fee unlimited open access partnership

Finding new cell markers to track the most aggressive breast cancer in blood

A new, cleaner way to make this common fertilizer

[Press-News.org] Limiting greenhouse gas emissions from land use in Europe