Environment✓ Verified

Trees keep absorbing carbon long after they stop growing

Reported byScienceDaily ↗·Sourced by Goodlede

What backs it

Columbia Climate School researchers found that oak trees continue photosynthesizing and absorbing CO₂ for months after annual growth ends, contradicting the assumption that higher photosynthesis rates lead to greater tree growth and potentially requiring climate models to revise forecasts of long-term forest carbon storage capacity.

Worth noting

The finding suggests forests may store less carbon in wood than previously expected, which could lower climate mitigation estimates.

Systemic / trendWell established✓ Verified

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