Current:Home > ScamsStudy Shows Protected Forests Are Cooler -SummitInvest
Study Shows Protected Forests Are Cooler
View
Date:2025-04-18 05:17:43
Measured at a global scale, protected forests with legal limits on human activity are significantly cooler than neighboring forests that lack protections, scientists reported in a new Science Advances study today.
The researchers compared land surface temperatures and warming rates in protected areas to those in unprotected zones across five major biomes—boreal, temperate and tropical forests, grasslands and savannas—and found warming rates across 60 percent of all the protected zones were lower than non-protected areas in the same biomes.
The temperature reducing effect they documented was most evident in protected forests because they have more vegetation, which gives them a complex structure that “creates more temperature buffering,” said co-author Pieter De Frenne, a climate researcher at the University of Ghent.
“The reason we think this pattern emerges is because of vegetation structure,” he said. A detailed analysis of forest canopies, he added, showed more leaf area per square meter of ground in protected areas, which means more shade and cooler temperatures that help protect biodiversity near the forest floor.
“The cooling effect is very important for life below the tree canopy near the ground,” he said. Most forest biodiversity is in that zone, including in temperate, mid-latitude forests where “80 percent of all plant species grow in shade of trees.”
The findings suggest the cooling effect is strongest in the globe-spanning belt of boreal forests at high latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere, the world’s largest land biome, encompassing about 27 percent of total global forest area.
“The warming rate in protected boreal forests is up to 20% lower than in their surroundings, which is particularly important for species … where warming is more pronounced,” the scientists wrote in the study. The fact that unprotected areas with the same type of vegetation show reduced capacity to buffer warming “highlights the importance of conservation to stabilize the local climate and safeguard biodiversity.”
Oregon State University forest ecologist Matthew Betts said the global scope of the study is impressive and “emphasizes the importance of protected areas … from a climate perspective.”
“My very first reaction was, why didn’t I do this? It’s a really good idea,” said Betts, who was not involved in the new study. “We’ve known for decades, if not longer, that protected areas are critical for biodiversity conservation, just in terms of reducing anthropogenic disturbance. This paper shows there’s an additional benefit. And that’s a cooling effect.”
Getting more temperature data from forest understory would help show the climate benefits of forest protection in even greater detail, he added.
“At the moment we don’t have under-canopy data for large tracts of the planet,” he said. “Peter has done a great job of implementing a network of under-canopy climate stations across Europe but we don’t have anything like that in North America, and I’m sure there’s nothing like that in China or Southeast Asia. And so to do a really good job of this we need international collaborations focused on quantifying microclimate underneath the forest canopy.”
He said the paper also left him curious about the effects of different levels of protection, an important consideration in a world with a growing population that makes it impossible to completely ban human activities in many regions.
Betts said a previous study he worked on showed that higher levels of protection lead to less deforestation.
“None of them worked as well as we hoped. I think on average, protected areas reduce deforestation by something like 40 percent,” he said. “So, as was pointed out in this paper, they’re not perfect. We can’t eliminate human use, and there are limits to monitoring and measuring impacts,” he added.
At the same time, there are some non-protected areas where more sustainable forestry management is practiced that can maintain forest canopy. It would be “very interesting to know what role those sorts of forests play in moderating climate,” he said.
A Good News Story, But There are Wild Cards for the Climate
The new study, he said, is good news, for the most part. “But there are a number of elements that could shift that finding,” he cautioned. “Number one, in the northwestern U.S., it’s painfully apparent that increased warming and fuel loading is driving fires, and fires removed canopy, at least in the short term.”
Fires don’t know the boundaries between protected and non-protected areas, he noted. “They might burn a little bit less voraciously through old growth,” he said. “But it’s still going to burn, as we found out here with the multiple hundreds of thousands of acres that burned in Oregon over the last couple of years.”
More warming means more forest disturbance, which will “detract from the capacity of those protected areas to buffer climate,” he said. “And we’re going to reach a cap in terms of the total amount of area we can feasibly conserve on the planet, and keep humans out, from a management perspective, which means we really need to think about what we call the matrix, the areas in between the protected areas,” he added.
The biodiversity benefits of protected, temperature-buffering forests also have limits. “Within protected areas temperatures will exceed the tolerances of some species,” he said. “So in an ideal world, they move. They move north, and they move upslope. But if the intervening areas are really hot, or if they’re just very difficult to cross, because they’re heavily managed, that will make it difficult for them to do that movement.”
That can make management of the zones between protected areas as important as the protected areas themselves. He said the new paper doesn’t address that, but a holistic view of forest management will “help biodiversity under a changing climate.”
If the average global temperature increase approaches 2.5 degrees Celsius, as predicted in some of the most recent projections, it will “test the limits of protection,” he said. “Some species just won’t be able to pull it off anymore.”
veryGood! (199)
Related
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- US bars ex-Guatemala President Alejandro Giammattei from entry 3 days after he left office
- Mexico and Chile ask International Criminal Court to investigate possible crimes in Gaza
- Nearly 30 years later, family of slain California college student sues school for wrongful death
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Penny the 10-foot shark surfaces near Florida, marking nearly 5,000 miles in her journey
- Kids of color get worse health care across the board in the U.S., research finds
- Gangs in Haiti have attacked a community for 4 days. Residents fear that the violence could spread
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Fan’s racist abuse of match official leads to 1-point deduction for French soccer club Bastia
Ranking
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- Anti-crime bill featuring three-strikes provision wins approval from GOP-led House panel in Kentucky
- Massachusetts driver gets life sentence in death of Black man killed in road rage incident
- US applications for jobless benefits fall to lowest level since September 2022
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- 15 students and 1 teacher drown when a boat capsizes in a lake in western India
- Margot Robbie, Jacob Elordi and More Score 2024 BAFTA Nominations: See the Complete List
- Woman alleges long-term heart problems caused by Panera Bread's caffeinated lemonade
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Champion Bodybuilder Chad McCrary Dead at 49
I’m a Croc Hater–But These Viral TikTok Croc Boots & More New Styles Are Making Me Reconsider
Thailand fireworks factory explosion kills at least 20 people
Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
NY midwife who gave kids homeopathic pellets instead of vaccines fined $300K for falsifying records
Jacob Elordi takes a goofy tumble down the stairs in 'SNL' promo: Watch
A Russian border city cancels Orthodox Epiphany events due to threats of Ukrainian attacks