PARIS: Climate change could release
unexpectedly huge stores of carbon dioxide from Arctic soils, which would in
turn fuel a vicious circle of global warming, a new study warned.
And
according to one commentary on the research, current models of climate change
have not taken this extra source of greenhouse gas into
account.
Scientists have long known that organic carbon trapped
inside a blanket of frozen permafrost covering one fifth of the world's land
mass would, if thawed, release greenhouse gases into the
atmosphere.
But until now they simply did not have a good idea of how
much carbon is actually locked inside this Arctic freezer.
To find
out, a team of American researchers led by Chien-Lu Ping of the University of
Alaska Fairbanks examined a wide range of landscapes across North
America.
They took soil samples from 117 sites, each to a depth of at
least one metre, in order to provide a full assessment of the region's so-called
"carbon pool."
Previous estimates of the Arctic carbon pool relied
heavily on a relative handful of measurements conducted outside of the Arctic,
and only to a depth of 40 centimetres.
The study, published in the
British journal Nature
Geoscience
,
found that the stock of organic carbon is considerably higher than previously
thought, 60 percent more than the previously estimated.
This is
roughly equivalent of one sixth of the entire carbon content in the
atmosphere.
And that is just for North America. The size and mix of
landscapes in the northern reaches of Europe and Russia are about the same, and
probably contain a comparable amount of carbon-dioxide producing matter
currently held in check only by the cold, the study said.