Forests are made up of trees and other plants. These use carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas that is created by industry) and converts it into food and oxygen. The more forests there are the more carbon dioxide gets converted back into oxygen.
Trees are tremendous devices for capturing and storing carbon. If we were to ask our top scientists and engineers to create a highly efficient and environmentally friendly way to remove carbon from the atmosphere. They could do no better than to invent a tree. Trees use photosynthesis to capture and concentrate carbon, removing trace CO2 gas from the air (<4/100th of 1%) and building trees that are fully 50% carbon by weight.
Old-growth forests have the capacity to store more carbon per acre than any ecosystem on earth. This represents both a problem and an opportunity. The problem is that logging old growth forests and converting them to young tree farms has contributed disproportionately to global warming. For instance, over the last century, logging on the westside of Oregon and Washington released at least 1.5 billion net metric tons of carbon emissions, which is 100 times more carbon emissions from land use compared to the global average for any similar sized area. After clearcutting, logged sites can remain sources of CO2 for 20 years or more, and carbon stores on logged sites are not fully recovered for centuries.
What about carbon capture and storage? That's the opportunity. Past practices have left millions of acres of forests are in a state of recovery from past logging. Those growing forests are already absorbing some greenhouse gas emissions. We can increase carbon capture and storage in forest vegetation and soils by changing our land management practices. Forests will grow and store more carbon … if only we will log them less and let them grow more. A good climate strategy would restore young forests to their former glory as healthy older forests.
To help young forests develop into healthy old forests and make them more resilient to global climate change, foresters can thin some of the dense young tree plantations, and remove small fuels from some of the dry forests suffering as a result of fire exclusion. The focus must be on removing only small trees. The large trees should be protected so they can store carbon and provide other values, such as clean drinking water, habitat for fish and wildlife, and quality of life.
A:Trees take in CO2, store the carbon and release the oxygen.Trees need Carbon Dioxide in order to photosynthesize. Since CO2 is the leading contributor to global warming, having the trees take it out of the atmosphere to be converted into oxygen, slows the process somewhat.
Planting trees helps reduce the greenhouse effect because trees absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and store carbon in their biomass. By removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, trees help to mitigate the buildup of greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming. Additionally, trees provide shade, which can help cool the surrounding area and reduce the demand for energy-intensive cooling systems.
Yes, planting trees can help reduce the greenhouse effect as trees absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis. This helps to offset the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere, which is a major contributor to the greenhouse effect and global warming. However, planting trees alone is not a solution to climate change and must be combined with other efforts to reduce emissions.
Using unleaded petrol can help reduce the greenhouse effect because it produces fewer emissions of harmful gases like carbon dioxide and nitrogen oxides compared to leaded petrol. However, the overall impact on the greenhouse effect also depends on factors such as fuel efficiency and driving habits.
Ozone layer does not allow UV to pass through which kill the greenhouse gas absorbing plankton. This avoids the greenhouse effect.
We don't want to stop the natural greenhouse effect, which keeps the earth warm enough for life. We can stop the enhanced (or accelerated) greenhouse effect which is causing global warming. But we have to act now and seriously, to move to renewable energy, stop burning fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas), and replant billions of trees.
Planting trees helps reduce the greenhouse effect because trees absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and store carbon in their biomass. By removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, trees help to mitigate the buildup of greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming. Additionally, trees provide shade, which can help cool the surrounding area and reduce the demand for energy-intensive cooling systems.
Yes, planting trees can help reduce the greenhouse effect as trees absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis. This helps to offset the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere, which is a major contributor to the greenhouse effect and global warming. However, planting trees alone is not a solution to climate change and must be combined with other efforts to reduce emissions.
The normal greenhouse effect keeps the earth warm enough for life.The enhanced, or accelerated greenhouse effect, is causing global warming.
Trees help to slow down greenhouse effect as they absorb carbon dioxide. This carbon dioxide is a major green house gas and can cause greenhouse effect.
Using unleaded petrol can help reduce the greenhouse effect because it produces fewer emissions of harmful gases like carbon dioxide and nitrogen oxides compared to leaded petrol. However, the overall impact on the greenhouse effect also depends on factors such as fuel efficiency and driving habits.
No. Nitrogen, which makes up 78% of the atmosphere, makes no difference to the greenhouse effect.
Trees sequester (store) carbon for long periods of time. When the tree dies, or is burned up in a fire, that carbon is released back into the atmosphere. Trees harvested for lumber continue storing most of the carbon they have sequestered.
Ozone layer does not allow UV to pass through which kill the greenhouse gas absorbing plankton. This avoids the greenhouse effect.
Plants help lessen the greenhouse effect by absorbing carbon dioxide during photosynthesis. They store this carbon in their biomass, which reduces the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Additionally, plants release oxygen as a byproduct of photosynthesis, which helps to balance the levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
showing people Antarctica will help them to reduce greenhouse gases
We don't want to stop the natural greenhouse effect, which keeps the earth warm enough for life. We can stop the enhanced (or accelerated) greenhouse effect which is causing global warming. But we have to act now and seriously, to move to renewable energy, stop burning fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas), and replant billions of trees.
As the catalytic converter emits CO2 and H2O in the air. The gasses absorbe infra red radiation emitted by the earth and re-radiate the energy as heat back towards the earth. So the more CO2 and H2O emitted to the air the more heat there will be. So no, the catalytic converter does not help reduce the greenhouse effect.