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National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis

Project Description

Tree planting is being pursued at local, state, national, and international levels as a means to slow greenhouse gas accumulation and climate warming. Yet a growing body of scientific literature suggests that increasing forest cover influences climate by a number of mechanisms other than carbon accumulation. These mechanisms include changing the amount of sunlight absorbed by the Earth's surface and changing rates of evaporation. In some northern regions, for example, increasing forest cover masks snow during spring, which in turn leads to warming even though the forests are storing more carbon. Current policy frameworks such as the Kyoto Protocol do not take into account all the different ways changing land cover influences climate. We will be conducting a series of three meetings, bringing together ecosystem ecologists, climate scientists, and policy experts to synthesize recent work on the different ways land cover change influences climate. In a second step, we plan to draft a policy perspective that reevaluates the role of terrestrial ecosystems in climate policy.
Working Group Participants

Principal Investigator(s)

James T. Randerson, Josep G. Canadell, Robert B. Jackson

Project Dates

Start: January 1, 2008

End: April 1, 2009

completed

Participants

Ray G. Anderson
University of California, Irvine
Roni Avissar
Duke University
Dennis Baldocchi
University of California, Berkeley
George Ban-Weiss
Stanford University
Gordon Bonan
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
Ken Caldeira
Stanford University
Josep G. Canadell
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
Long Cao
Carnegie Institution
Ruth S. DeFries
University of Maryland
Robert Dickinson
University of Texas, Austin
Noah Diffenbaugh
Purdue University
Christopher B. Field
Carnegie Institution
Kevin Gurney
Purdue University
Forrest M. Hoffman
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Bruce A. Hungate
Northern Arizona University
Robert B. Jackson
Duke University
Lara M. Kueppers
University of California, Merced
Beverly E. Law
Oregon State University
Yaqiong Lu
Unknown
Sebastiaan Luyssaert
University of Antwerp
Thomas L. O'Halloran
Oregon State University
Martin Otte
Duke University
Diane Pataki
University of California, Irvine
Julia Pongratz
Carnegie Institution
James T. Randerson
University of California, Irvine
Abigail Swann
University of California, Berkeley
Kaiguang Zhao
Texas A and M University

Products

  1. Journal Article / 2011

    Biophysical considerations in forestry for climate protection

  2. Journal Article / 2013

    How will land use affect air temperature in the surface boundary layer? Lessons learned from a comparative study on the energy balance of an oak savanna and annual grassland in California, USA

  3. Journal Article / 2008

    Protecting climate with forests

  4. Journal Article / 2012

    Surface energy partitioning over four dominant vegetation types across the United States in a coupled regional climate model (Weather Research and Forecasting Model 3-Community Land Model 3.5)

  5. Journal Article / 2014

    Biophysical forcings of land-use changes from potential forestry activities in North America