| Environment
The
Breathing Earth
by
Richard R. Hofstetter, Esq.
Carbon
and Climate Change Editor's note: The concept that carbon
dixoide is constantly being buried in the earth and living plants
is poorly understood, even in the environmental community.
In
the Monitor we've published three science reports, describing ways
that the arctic tundra pulls carbon from the atmosphere, as well
as articles on the vital role that trees play in carbon reduction,
and how one-celled ocean plants stabilize the atmosphere and climate.
For our 50th issue, the Monitor asked respected author Richard R.
Hofstetter to provide an overview, which we proudly expect to become
a standard reference on the topic.
Human
activities may well be changing the Earth's climate; a principal
culprit is carbon dioxide, released upon the combustion of fossil
fuels.
CO2
is, of course, naturally present in the Earth's atmosphere, albeit
in relatively small quantities. Its scarcity belies its importance:
it makes plant life possible. But it is possible to have too much
of a good thing.
In larger concentrations, CO2 is poisonous to animal life. It is
also
very efficient at absorbing infrared radiation which would otherwise
be reflected back out into space. As CO2 and other so-called greenhouse
gasses accumulate in the atmosphere as a result of human activity,
the predictions of global warming no longer seem alarmist.
Our
sister planet Venus has an atmosphere that is composed largely of
CO2, and, consequently, has surface temperatures high enough to
melt lead.
Prior
to the industrial revolution, the level of atmospheric CO2 stood
at less than 300 parts per million. Today, our air contains approximately
375 parts per million. In fifty years, it will rise to more than
700 parts per million. This unprecedented rise is the result of
the cumulative assaults on the planet's air by human exhaust pipes
and slash and burn agriculture.
Some scientists believe that the observable rise in surface temperatures
worldwide is the result of such global warming. Their warnings of
pernicious Malthusian-like consequences for our race (the "final
solution to the world's CO2 question") may not be unfounded.
Earth's Dynamic Atmosphere
The Earth's atmosphere is not a dead-end dumping ground for waste
gasses. CO2 is constantly being cleansed from the atmosphere by
the process of life itself (and even by such "natural"
forces as precipitation).
The
so-called carbon cycle can best be understood as breathing by the
planet Earth. Each year, green plants inhale about 100 billion tons
of CO2 from the atmosphere during photosynthesis. Animals and other
organisms which break down plant matter (ex: fungi, molds, bacteria,
microbes, termites, worms, beetles, slugs, et cetera) exhale about
100 billion tons annually back into the atmosphere. Since the atmosphere
at any given time holds about 700 billion tons of CO2, all of Earth's
CO2 is recycled in this fashion about every seven years.
There
are other, non-biological, sources of CO2, such as volcanic
activity and the burning of vegetation. However, in the long run
these sources represent only minor perturbations in the cycle of
respiration. Over eons, the planet can remain comfortably cool if
only as little as a half billion tons of CO2 is permanently buried
each year, representing about one part per thousand of that which
exists naturally.
We
know that a phenomenal amount of carbon has already been sequestered
as a result of biological activity. The vast stores of hydrocarbons
underfoot, that we now extract and burn for fuel, came from the
soft tissues of herbaceous plants that grew millions of years ago,
and would most certainly remained entombed
forever were it not for human activity.
Limestone
and marble are nothing more than the products of geological forces
acting upon the carbonate-bearing shells of organisms which perished
eons ago. Even sea water can capture and hold carbon (CO2 and water
are in equilibrium with carbonic acid and its anion in solution:
CO2 + H20 = HCO3).
The
world's oceans hold nearly fifty times as much CO2 in this form
as the atmosphere. In the absence of life, CO2 would be the most
abundant gas in the Earth's atmosphere.
We
humans have upset Earth's breathing. Each year, we add an extra
six billion tons of CO2 to the air. We've given the planet a case
of asthma. Our fear is that Earth may soon be developing a fever,
along with her asthma. Or perhaps the Earth will just change the
way she breathes.
Missing
Carbon Six billion tons seems to be a lot of extra carbon for
the Earth to handle each year, particularly since a little bit of
this gas seems to go a long way. But let's put this in perspective
for a moment.
Fungi, molds, bacteria, microbes, termites, worms, beetles and slugs
produce about twenty times as much CO2 as we humans do, and have
been doing so from time immemorial. The Earth has been able to cope
with that amount just fine. There is, in fact, a well-developed
and immensely old mechanism in place to keep this gas in check.
Is
it reasonable to assume that the six billion extra tons of carbon
will just accumulate in the atmosphere ad infinitum, until our race
perishes in the ovens of a Bio-belzek? Or would it be logical to
expect the rate of photosynthesis, and carbon burial, to increase
and mitigate the effect?
Recent
observations would suggest the latter. Though the level of CO2 is
unquestionably on the rise, it is not accumulating in the air quite
as fast as we would otherwise expect. Some of the carbon is missing.
Paradigm Shift The Gaia theory, first proposed by the British inventor
James Lovelock in the 1970's, may help to explain the riddle of
the missing carbon. It also explains a lot of the other peculiarities
of planet Earth.
The Gaia theory holds that the Earth's wildly improbable atmosphere,
oceans and climate are constantly being regulated by the process
of life itself, a single living organism which Lovelock called "Gaia"
(from the goddess in Greek mythology).
In
the 1960's, NASA hired Lovelock to devise an experiment for detecting
the past or present existence of life on Mars. His assignment forced
him to consider the means by which one could detect the existence
of life on Earth. As an atmospheric chemist, Lovelock, logically,
first studied the Earth's atmosphere.
Free
oxygen, scientists agree, is the product of biological activity.
Oxygen is also very reactive, and readily combines with other elements
to form oxide compounds. Accordingly, it must be constantly replenished,
or it will gradually disappear.
Oxygen
is also necessary for much of the life on this planet. Humans and
virtually all other animals would quickly suffocate without it.
About 21% of the Earth's atmosphere is comprised of oxygen. From
the best information available to us, oxygen has remained at or
near 21% for a considerable period of time.
The
mere presence of more than a trace of elemental oxygen in the
Earth's atmosphere is evidence of the existence of life. The presence
of a significant amount of oxygen on Mars would therefore be a signature
of life (or at least life as we know it).
But
Lovelock became intrigued by a more basic question: how and why
is oxygen, a highly reactive biologically produced element, held
at a constant 21% in the Earth's atmosphere? The chance of this
occurring randomly is virtually zero.
Lovelock
then observed another remarkable fact that further belied any notion
that this could be mere coincidence: the figure of 21% is exactly
the concentration of oxygen which is most conducive to the survival
of life on the planet (at least, life as it currently exists).
If
the percentage of atmospheric oxygen was higher than this figure,
much of the Earth's biomass would be combustible. If it was lower
by even a few percentage points, most present animal life would
suffer or even die.
A
balance of toxic gasses Lovelock also discusses other curious gasses
in the Earth's atmosphere. These gasses include methane, ammonia
and CO2, the first two of which are almost completely of biological
origin. This gaseous triumvirate appears to have a crucial role
in regulating oxygen, pH and surface temperature, respectively.
Incredibly, the mixture and ratio of such gasses is precisely that
which is needed to make the world most hospitable for life as we
know it, and somehow these gasses have remained in this balance
for an immense period of time.
Lovelock
summarizes these concerns:
Life
first appeared on the Earth about 3,500 million years ago. From
that time until now, the presence of fossils shows that the Earth's
climate has changed very little. Yet the output of heat from the
sun, the surface properties of the Earth, and the composition of
the atmosphere have almost certainly varied greatly over the same
period.
The
chemical composition of the atmosphere bears no relation to the
expectations of steady-state chemical equilibrium. The presence
of methane, nitrous oxide, and even nitrogen in our present oxidizing
atmosphere represents violation of the rules of chemistry to be
measured in tens of orders of magnitude.
Disequilibria
on this scale suggest that the atmosphere is not merely a biological
product, but more probably a biological construction: not living,
but like a cat's fur, a bird's feathers, or the paper of a wasp's
nest, an extension of a living system designed to maintain a chosen
environment. Thus the atmospheric concentration of gasses such as
oxygen and ammonia is found to be kept at an optimum value from
which even small departures could have disastrous
consequences for life.
The
climate and the chemical properties of the Earth now and throughout
its history seem always to have been optimal for life. For this
to have happened by chance is as unlikely as to survive unscathed
a drive blindfold through rush-hour traffic.
Gaia:
A New Look at Life on the Earth
Gaia could respond, as CO2 rises above the optimal level for life
One
characteristic of life, the "experts" seem to agree, is
its adaptability. Clearly, the Earth did not always possess its
current oxygen-nitrogen atmosphere. Before the emergence of life,
the Earth's atmosphere was an inhospitable brew of CO2, ammonia,
hydrogen, methane and water vapor.
Life
emerged under these conditions, and we know from our presence here
today that the conditions ever since have never been wholly inhospitable
for life.
Early
life had to cope with a reducing atmosphere, rich in hydrogen and
hydrogen-bearing molecules but bereft of oxygen. The first life
forms could have generated a chemical gradient as large as plants
do today, with hydrogen-rich material being found externally, rather
than internally.
Over time, the abundance of life of this kind would have oxidized
the reducing materials in the Earth's crust, leading to a build-up
of oxygen in the air.
Atmospheric oxygen must have been very poisonous to most of these
early life forms, much as it is for today's anaerobic bacteria.
But Gaia adapted. Rather than oxygen being catastrophic for life,
life has since become dependent upon it. Today's oxygen-breathing
animals owe their very existence to cynaobacteria (sometimes called
blue-green algae) that polluted the atmosphere with oxygen aeons
ago. (Even today, the fossilized microbial mats of these early polluters,
known as stromatolites, still grow in a few scattered subtidal marine
localities.) The Earth we see today is at Gaian homeostasis, an
improbable entropy sustained this way by the
world's most ancient life form.
One
can imagine how Gaia could respond to various changes in the
contemporary world. As CO2 rises above the optimal level for life,
it
would seem that the added nutrient would be exploited by plants
everywhere, and the rate of carbon fixation (and ultimately carbon
burial) would rise accordingly.
Boyd
Strain, a Duke University botanist, hopes it will not be necessary
to wait a half century or more to determine the effect of CO2 on
the growth and diversity of plants. Strain has devised an experiment
that duplicates the 21st century atmosphere in a section of Duke
Forest. It will still be several years before any conclusions can
be drawn from the experiment, but Strain believes that increased
levels of CO2 already existing in the atmosphere have contributed
to enhanced crop yields achieved during this
century. No doubt, more than rice and soybeans will benefit from
this ubiquitous gas.
It
would be unreasonable to expect that all plants would exploit the
added CO2 equally. There will inevitably be changes in the diversity
of global plant life. William Schlesinger, who now manages the Duke
experiment, believes that species diversity will suffer. "In
almost every case in which a fertilizer has been applied to a natural
community, it has reduced species diversity." He claims. The
Earth may very well see more vegetation, but it would also see fewer
kinds of plants, just as inevitably occurs when one dumps phosphorous
in a lake or nitrogen in a grassland.
If
the world is truly alive, we must re-think the carbon debate. In
fact, we really ought to re-think environmental policy.
From
Circumstantial to Direct Evidence Lovelock built an overwhelming
circumstantial case for the existence of Gaia. But his serendipitous
discovery was based on the observable effects of Gaia, not Gaia
herself. It was up to his successors to accumulate direct evidence.
The
best overall work on this subject so far is Tyler Volk's Gaia's
Body: Toward a Physiology of the Earth (1998: Copernicus). Volk,
an Associate Professor of Biology at New York University, takes
the reader on a fascinating journey through Gaia's vital organs.
The brilliant microbiologist Lynn Margulis has also written extensively
on Gaia. As our understanding of this planet has improved, the Gaia
theory has gained some formidable disciples.
If
the Gaia theory holds true, there ought to be some mechanism to
increase carbon burial in response to human activity. Pedro Verdugo
has recently discovered at least one possibility.
Verdugo,
a Professor of Bioengineering at the University of Washington, and
his students, have identified a new carbon burial mechanism in the
world's oceans. Verdugo noted that a large pool of organic carbon
resides in the world's oceans in the form of dissolved organic matter
("DOM"), and has described a means by which DOM assembles
into microgels and becomes particulate organic matter ("POM").
His
studies indicate that these POM microgels can undergo crystalline
mineralization, or phase transitions promoting their sedimentation
to the ocean floor, eventually abandoning the food chain.
Conversely,
these microgels can increase the turn over of organic matter, by
allowing bacteria to colonize and digest the assembled polymers
in the gels' matrix, which would otherwise be difficult for the
bacteria to capture and degrade.
Whether
the carbon is buried, or recycled, depends upon a number of factors.
Verdugo has found that crystalline mineralization of marine microgels
is due to the predominantly negative charge of the polymers that
form the DOM pool. As the inside of these small microgels form a
negatively charged environment, they attract and concentrate (by
what is called a "Donnan mechanism") Ca and Mg ions that
are abundant in sea water and that carry two positive charges.
Their
studies show that due to the high Ca concentration in the matrix
gels, slight changes in acidity --that don't affect the solubility
of Ca in sea water -- can produce precipitation and
crystalline mineralization of Ca carbonate in these microgels.
The
formation of these insoluble crystals increases the density of these
marine microgels and results in sedimentation falling to the bottom
of the ocean, excluding their organic matrix from the food chain
and eventually creating a carbon sink.
In
this fashion, carbon joins the chalky sediments at the bottom of
the sea. The probability that free polymers from the DOM pool which
are linear molecules -- can assemble forming microgels is a function
of the second power of their length. (Unfortunately, ultraviolet
light, which can penetrate up to ten meters into sea water, can
readily break up polymer chains, interfering with their ability
to assemble.
The
thinning of the world's ozone layer from the release of CFC's may
therefore slow the rate of gel formation and crystalline mineralization,
slowing the rate of carbon burial.)
The
rate of carbon burial is also affected by pH and temperature. If
the oceans are slightly more alkaline than pH 8.5, or if the oceans
cool a bit, there is a higher rate of crystallization. Higher crystallization
means higher carbon burial and less recycling. Verdugo's findings
were published in the February 5, 1998 issue of Nature.
I
met with Professor Verdugo in February, 1998, to discuss his studies.
I was naturally interested in a positive feedback mechanism, some
indication that the rate of carbon burial was rising in response
to the increasing level of CO2 in the atmosphere. Verdugo claimed
that he needed to research the matter further, but agreed that higher
levels of CO2, which dissolves easily in sea water forming carbonic
acid and calcium carbonate, could eventually lead to more mineralization.
Is
the Earth in Trouble? No. As Lynn Margulis has said, "Gaia
is one
tough bitch."
Life
has survived massive bolide impacts from outer space, huge
variations in solar output, gripping ice ages, the shifting of the
Earth's magnetic field and a host of other disasters that would
make human perturbations seem puny by comparison.
Life
has already maintained a tenacious hold on this planet for some
3.8 billion years, and will exist here for another 5.5 billion years
or so, until the world's oceans boil from the heat emitted from
an exhausted red sun.
Gaia evolved ways of coping with all sorts of disasters long before
there were humans. She will survive us, too. Is the Human Race in
Trouble? Maybe. It seems that the Earth can heal, but we do not
know how quickly. Gaia may not be able to react in time to save
us from our own folly.
From
the perspective of an organism with a life span measured in terms
of eons, rather than decades, we humans may seem expendable. Indeed
we are.
More than 99% of all species to inhabit this Earth are now extinct,
and Gaia takes it all in stride. As Margulis has said, Gaia is no
doting
mother.
Something
we might do, whether it be eradicating our fellow species, releasing
CO2, methane, chlorofluorocarbons, and other gasses into the air,
or simply logging the world's rain forests, may well set in motion
a cascade of events which will have very unpleasant consequences
for us as a species. Our flatulence may well raise global temperatures,
melt the polar ice caps and inundate coastal cities. The Gaia theory
is no panacea for polluters.
Our
Mission Our objective as environmentalists, quite simply, is to
preserve those conditions which are most conducive to our survival
as a species. We are not stewards of the Earth, though we are part
of her very physiology.
In
this regard, it would be wise for us to cut CO2 and other greenhouse
gas emissions to more reasonable levels. The technology exists now
to do so without seriously compromising our standard of living.
The
Earth is a dynamic living organism, one which we do not fully
understand. Though her wounds may heal, there is no need for us
to inflict them gratuitously.
Richard R. Hofstetter practices business and environmental law in
Indianapolis. He is the author of Mobius, as well as numerous articles.
You may visit his website at www.protect-earth.com
Original article source: http://www.monitor.net/monitor/9808a/carbonexchange.html
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