Trillions and Trillions of Trees make that 'giant sucking sound' of CO2 from the atmosphere

WUWT reader P Wilson writes;

There are just over three trillion trees on Earth, according to a new assessment. The figure is eight times as big as the previous best estimate, which counted perhaps 400 billion at most.

It has been produced by Thomas Crowther from Yale University, and colleagues, who combined a mass of ground survey data with satellite pictures.

The team tells the journal Nature that the new total represents upwards of 420 trees for every person on the planet. The more refined number will now form a baseline for a wide range of research applications – everything from studies that consider animal and plant habitats for biodiversity reasons, to new models of the climate, because it is trees of course that play an important role in removing the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

More  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-34134366

The press release from Yale:


 

Trees-world

Seeing the forest and the trees, all 3 trillion of them

A new Yale-led study estimates that there are more than 3 trillion trees on Earth, about seven and a half times more than some previous estimates. But the total number of trees has plummeted by roughly 46% since the start of human civilization, the study estimates.

Using a combination of satellite imagery, forest inventories, and supercomputer technologies, the international team of researchers was able to map tree populations worldwide at the square-kilometer level.

Their results, published in the journal Nature, provide the most comprehensive assessment of tree populations ever produced and offer new insights into a class of organism that helps shape most terrestrial biomes.

The new insights can improve the modeling of many large-scale systems, from carbon cycling and climate change models to the distribution of animal and plant species, say the researchers.

“Trees are among the most prominent and critical organisms on Earth, yet we are only recently beginning to comprehend their global extent and distribution,” said Thomas Crowther, a postdoctoral fellow at the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies (F&ES) and lead author of the study.

“They store huge amounts of carbon, are essential for the cycling of nutrients, for water and air quality, and for countless human services,” he added. “Yet you ask people to estimate, within an order of magnitude, how many trees there are and they don’t know where to begin. I don’t know what I would have guessed, but I was certainly surprised to find that we were talking about trillions.”

The study was inspired by a request by Plant for the Planet, a global youth initiative that leads the United Nations Environment Programme’s “Billion Tree Campaign.” Two years ago the group approached Crowther asking for baseline estimates of tree numbers at regional and global scales so they could better evaluate the contribution of their efforts and set targets for future tree-planting initiatives.

At the time, the only global estimate was just over 400 billion trees worldwide, or about 61 trees for every person on Earth. That prediction was generated using satellite imagery and estimates of forest area, but did not incorporate any information from the ground.

The new study used a combination of approaches to reveal that there are 3.04 trillion trees — roughly 422 trees per person.

Crowther and his colleagues collected tree density information from more than 400,000 forest plots around the world. This included information from several national forest inventories and peer-reviewed studies, each of which included tree counts that had been verified at the ground level. Using satellite imagery, they were then able to assess how the number of trees in each of those plots is related to local characteristics such as climate, topography, vegetation, soil condition, and human impacts.

“The diverse array of data available today allowed us to build predictive models to estimate the number of trees at each location around the globe,” said Yale postdoctoral student Henry Glick, second author of the study.

The resulting map has the potential to inform scientists about the structure of forest ecosystems in different regions, and it can be used to improve predictions about carbon storage and biodiversity around the world.

“Most global environmental data is thematically coarse,” said Matthew Hansen, a global forestry expert from the University of Maryland who was not involved in the study. “The study of Crowther et al. moves us towards a needed direct quantification of tree distributions, information ready to be used by a host of downstream science investigations.”

The highest densities of trees were found in the boreal forests in the sub-arctic regions of Russia, Scandinavia, and North America. But the largest forest areas, by far, are in the tropics, which are home to about 43% of the world’s trees. (Only 24% are in the dense boreal regions, while another 22% exist in temperate zones.)

The results illustrate how tree density changes within forest types. Researchers found that climate can help predict tree density in most biomes. In wetter areas, for instance, more trees are able to grow. However, the positive effects of moisture were reversed in some regions because humans typically prefer the moist, productive areas for agriculture.

In fact, human activity is the largest driver of tree numbers worldwide, said Crowther. While the negative impact of human activity on natural ecosystems is clearly visible in small areas, the study provides a new measure of the scale of anthropogenic effects, highlighting how historical land use decisions have shaped natural ecosystems on a global scale. In short, tree densities usually plummet as the human population increases. Deforestation, land-use change, and forest management are responsible for a gross loss of over 15 billion trees each year.

“We’ve nearly halved the number of trees on the planet, and we’ve seen the impacts on climate and human health as a result,” Crowther said. “This study highlights how much more effort is needed if we are to restore healthy forests worldwide.”

Researchers from 15 countries collaborated on the study. There were 14 researchers from across the Yale community who contributed to the study.

The article at Nature:

http://www.nature.com/news/global-count-reaches-3-trillion-trees-1.18287

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numberer
September 4, 2015 6:28 am

Tim Folkerts says,
‘ No, they claim “roughly 46%” …”
The article in Nature as posted by the magazine on the internet says exactly,
“…the number of trees worldwide has dropped by 46%…”

September 4, 2015 11:27 am

But, but, but, . . . Regardless of any estimates of the number of trees, the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere has increased by something like 40 percent in just the last century or so, and the carbon isotope ratios show that the extra carbon probably came from fossil fuels.
Jim Shea

drbob
Reply to  Jim Shea
September 4, 2015 1:59 pm

“the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere has increased by something like 40 percent” …
CORRECTION!… an increase in CO2 IN THE ATMOSPHERE from 0.028% (280 ppm) to 0.040% (400 ppm) is an increase of 0.0120% (120 ppm) …

Jer0me
Reply to  drbob
September 4, 2015 10:08 pm

You are talking ‘percentage points’, not percent. Percentage points are in relation to the whole, percent is in relation to the item under discussion alone.

Gloria Swansong
Reply to  Jim Shea
September 4, 2015 2:04 pm

Jim,
A century ago, CO2 was around 302 ppm. Now it is 400 ppm. That’s an increase of ~32%, or about one molecule per 10,000 dry air molecules (from three molecules to four).
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/modelforce/ghgases/Fig1A.ext.txt
This increase has been good for the planet, especially for plants and other living things.

September 4, 2015 1:06 pm

Geoengineered Forest Fire Incineration, Dark Ice, And Methane Extinction
Dane Wiggington
Record forest fires are raging around the globe, climate engineering is a primary factor fueling the planetary burning. All over the northern hemisphere boreal forests are going up in flames and smoke, further loading the atmosphere with Co2 and soot. This in turn triggers multiple climate feedback loops which causes much more rapid warming than what is already occuring.
http://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/geoengineered-forest-fire-incineration-dark-ice-and-methane-extinction/

Gloria Swansong
Reply to  Fred Zimmerman
September 4, 2015 1:33 pm

What warming? None is occurring now, nor has there been any for over 18 years.

phlogiston
Reply to  Fred Zimmerman
September 7, 2015 3:50 pm

Fred, Dane
The linked article is 100% psychotic drivel. What climate geoengineering? Do you mean the CO2 increase which is greening previously desert areas and holding more water on land? If warming and CO2 “trigger multiple feedback loops” then how did the dinosaurs not all burn to death in global temperatures 10C higher and CO2 of 2000-3000 ppm?
Actually the important climate feedbacks are negative. That is why life has existed on earth for 4 billion years.