Carbon Dioxide: The ‘Gas of Life’
By Paul Driessen
NewMediaJournal.us
It's amazing that minuscule bacteria can cause
life-threatening diseases and infections – and
miraculous that tiny doses of vaccines and
antibiotics can safeguard us against these deadly
scourges. It is equally incredible that, at the
planetary level, carbon dioxide is a miracle
molecule for plants – and the "gas of life" for most
living creatures on Earth.
In units of volume, CO2's concentration is typically
presented as 400 parts per million (400 ppm).
Translated, that's just 0.04% of Earth's atmosphere
– the equivalent of 40 cents out of one thousand
dollars, or 1.4 inches on a football field. Even
atmospheric argon is 23 times more abundant: 9,300
ppm. Moreover, the 400 ppm in 2013 is 120 ppm more
than the 280 ppm carbon dioxide level of 1800, and
that two-century increase is equivalent to a mere 12
cents out of $1,000, or one half-inch on a football
field.
Eliminate carbon dioxide, and terrestrial plants
would die, as would lake and ocean phytoplankton,
grasses, kelp and other water plants. After that,
animal and human life would disappear. Even reducing
CO2 levels too much – back to pre-industrial levels,
for example – would have terrible consequences.
Over the past two centuries, our planet finally
began to emerge from the Little Ice Age that had
cooled the Earth and driven Viking settlers out of
Greenland. Warming oceans slowly released some of
the carbon dioxide stored in their waters.
Industrial Revolution factories and growing human
populations burned more wood and fossil fuels, baked
more bread, and brewed more beer, adding still more
CO2 to the atmosphere. Much more of the miracle
molecule came from volcanoes and subsea vents,
forest fires, biofuel use, decaying plants and
animals, and "exhaust" from living, breathing
animals and humans.
What a difference that extra 120 ppm has made for
plants, and for animals and humans that depend on
them. The more carbon dioxide there is in the
atmosphere, the more it is absorbed by plants of
every description – and the faster and better they
grow, even under adverse conditions like limited
water, extremely hot air temperatures, or
infestations of insects, weeds and other pests. As
trees, grasses, algae and crops grow more rapidly
and become healthier and more robust, animals and
humans enjoy better nutrition on a planet that is
greener and greener.
Efforts to feed seven billion people, and improve
nutrition for more than a billion who are
malnourished, are steadily increasing the tension
between our need for land to feed humans – and the
need to keep land in its natural state to support
plants and wildlife. How well we are able to
increase crop production from the same or less
acreage may mean the difference between global food
sufficiency and rampant human starvation in coming
decades – and between the survival and extinction of
many plant and animal species.
Modern agricultural methods steadily and
dramatically improved crop yields per acre between
1930 and today. That is especially important if we
continue to divert millions of acres of farmland
from food crops, and convert millions of acres of
rainforest and other wildlife habitat to cropland,
for biofuel production to replace fossil fuels that
we again have in abundance. Carbon dioxide will play
a vital role in these efforts.
Increased CO2 levels in greenhouses dramatically
improve plant growth, especially when temperatures
are also elevated; rising atmospheric carbon dioxide
levels have likewise had astounding positive impacts
on outdoor plant growth and survival. Lentils and
other legumes grown in hothouses with 700 ppm CO2
improved their total biomass by 91%, their edible
parts yield by 150 % and their fodder yield by 67%,
compared to similar crops grown at 370 ppm carbon
dioxide, Indian researchers found.
Rice grown at 600 ppm CO2 increased its grain yield
by 28% with low applications of nitrogen fertilizer,
Chinese scientists calculated. US researchers
discovered that sugarcane grown in sunlit
greenhouses at 720 ppm CO2 and 11 degrees F (6
degrees C) higher than outside ambient air produced
stem juice an amazing 124% higher in volume than
sugarcane grown at ambient temperature and 360 ppm
carbon dioxide. Non-food crops like cotton also fare
much better when carbon dioxide levels are higher.
Research into natural forest and crop growth during
recent periods of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide
levels, between 1900 and 2010, found significant
improvements under "real-world" conditions, as well.
An analysis of Scots pines in Catalonia, Spain
showed that tree diameter and cross-sectional area
expanded by 84% between 1900 and 2000, in response
to rising CO2 levels. The growth of young Wisconsin
trees increased by 60%, and tree ring width expanded
by almost 53%, as atmospheric carbon dioxide
concentrations increased from 316 ppm in 1958 to 376
ppm in 2003, researchers calculated.
University of Minnesota scientists compared the
growth of trees and other plants during the first
half of the twentieth century (which included the
terrible Dust Bowl years), when CO2 levels rose only
10 ppm – to the period 1950-2000, when CO2 increased
by 57 ppm. They found that carbon dioxide lowered
plant sensitivity to severe drought and improved
their survival rates by almost 50%. Swiss
researchers concluded that, because of rising carbon
dioxide levels, "alpine plant life is proliferating,
biodiversity is on the rise, and the mountain world
appears more productive and inviting than ever."
Other researchers used historical (real-world) data
for land use, atmospheric CO2 concentration,
nitrogen deposition, fertilization, ozone levels,
rainfall and climate, to develop a computer model
that simulates plant growth responses for southern
US habitats from 1895 to 2007. They determined that
"net primary productivity" improved by an average of
27% during this 112-year period, with most of the
increased growth occurring after 1950, when CO2
levels rose the most, from 310 ppm in 1950 to 395
ppm in 2007.
How does all this happen? Plants use energy from the
sun to convert carbon dioxide from the air, and
water and minerals from the soil, into the
carbohydrates and other molecules that form plant
biomass. More CO2 means more and larger flowers;
higher seed mass and germination success; and
improved plant resistance to droughts, diseases,
viruses, pathogenic infections, air pollutants, and
salt or nitrogen accumulation in soils. Higher CO2
levels also improve plants' water use efficiency –
ensuring faster and greater carbon uptake by plant
tissues, with less water lost through transpiration.
More airborne CO2 lets plants reduce the size of
their stomata, little holes in leaves that plants
use to inhale carbon dioxide building blocks. When
CO2 is scarce, the openings increase in size, to
capture sufficient supplies of this "gas of life."
But increasing stomata size means more water
molecules escape, and the water loss places
increasing stress on the plants, eventually
threatening their growth and survival.
When the air's carbon dioxide levels rise – to 400,
600 or 800 ppm – the stomata shrink in size, causing
them to lose less water from transpiration, while
still absorbing ample CO2 molecules. That enables
them to survive extended dry spells much better.
(The
2009
and
2011
volumes of the Nongovernmental International Panel
on Climate Change report, Climate Change
Reconsidered, especially
this section,
and Dr. Craig Idso's
CO2Science.org
website summarize hundreds of similar studies of
crops, forests, grasslands, alpine areas and deserts
enriched by carbon dioxide. CO2 Science's
Plant Growth Database
lets people search for more studies.)
One of the worst things that could happen to our
planet and its people, animals and plants would be
for carbon dioxide levels to plunge back to levels
last seen before the Industrial Revolution.
Decreasing CO2 levels would be especially
problematical if Earth cools, in response to the sun
entering another "quiet phase," as happened during
the Little Ice Age. If Earth cools again, growing
seasons would shorten and arable cropland would
decrease in the northern temperate zones. We would
then need every possible molecule of carbon dioxide
– just to keep agricultural production high enough
to stave off mass human starvation ... and save
wildlife habitats from being plowed under to replace
that lost cropland.
However, even under current Modern Warm Era
conditions, crops, other plants, animals and people
will benefit from more carbon dioxide. The "gas of
life" is a miracle plant fertilizer that helps
plants grow and prosper – greening the planet,
nourishing wildlife habitats, feeding people who
crave larger amounts of more nutritious food,
preventing species loss, and even warming the Earth
a little.
That is an amazing fete for a colorless, odorless,
tasteless gas that comprises just 0.04 percent of
our atmosphere! We should praise carbon dioxide –
not vilify, ban or bury it.