Updated
Updated · ScienceDaily · Jul 10
Oak Trees Keep Absorbing 36% More Annual Carbon After Growth Stops, Challenging Forest Storage Models
Updated
Updated · ScienceDaily · Jul 10

Oak Trees Keep Absorbing 36% More Annual Carbon After Growth Stops, Challenging Forest Storage Models

3 articles · Updated · ScienceDaily · Jul 10

Summary

  • A Science Advances study found oak trees keep taking in CO2 for months after annual wood growth ends, weakening a core climate-model assumption that more photosynthesis directly means more long-term carbon storage.
  • At 137 oak forest sites, eastern oaks typically grew from May to July but photosynthesized into October, with 36% of annual carbon assimilation occurring after late-summer growth stopped; California oaks showed the same pattern at 26%.
  • Hot, dry conditions appear to drive the split: trunk growth depends on internal water pressure that drops quickly in arid weather, while photosynthesis continues at a reduced rate.
  • That extra carbon may go to leaves, roots, starch and cell maintenance rather than wood, suggesting forests could lock away less carbon than many models project in a warmer, CO2-richer world.
  • Researchers also found the disconnect widened in years with sharper wet-dry swings, indicating rising climate variability could make the pattern more common beyond oaks.

Insights

Trees are absorbing CO2 but not growing. Where is all that 'extra' carbon actually going?
If our climate models are wrong about trees, are forests a less reliable ally against a warming planet?