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In an average year, wildfires around the world burn an area equivalent
Ordinarily, this is part of a natural cycle. As vegetation in burned areas regrows, it draws CO2 back out of the atmosphere through photosynthesis. This is part of the fire-recovery cycle, which can take less than a year in grasslands, but decades in forests. But in Arctic or tropical peatlands, full recovery may not occur for centuries.
A recent study looked at and quantified the important role that
Researchers have combined field studies, satellite data, and modelling to quantify the amount of carbon that is placed in storage in the form of charcoal. Their results are that the production of pyrogenic carbon amounts to about 12% of the CO2 emissions from fires and can be considered a significant buffer for landscape fire emissions.
Charcoal does not represent a solution to the problem of increasingly
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How wildfires trap carbon for centuries to millennia
Photo, posted August 17, 2018, courtesy of the Bureau of Land Management Oregon and Washington via Flickr.
Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio.
By Randy Simon4.7
1515 ratings
In an average year, wildfires around the world burn an area equivalent
Ordinarily, this is part of a natural cycle. As vegetation in burned areas regrows, it draws CO2 back out of the atmosphere through photosynthesis. This is part of the fire-recovery cycle, which can take less than a year in grasslands, but decades in forests. But in Arctic or tropical peatlands, full recovery may not occur for centuries.
A recent study looked at and quantified the important role that
Researchers have combined field studies, satellite data, and modelling to quantify the amount of carbon that is placed in storage in the form of charcoal. Their results are that the production of pyrogenic carbon amounts to about 12% of the CO2 emissions from fires and can be considered a significant buffer for landscape fire emissions.
Charcoal does not represent a solution to the problem of increasingly
**********
How wildfires trap carbon for centuries to millennia
Photo, posted August 17, 2018, courtesy of the Bureau of Land Management Oregon and Washington via Flickr.
Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio.

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