Greenland to become greener with climate change, scientists say - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 09:03 PM | Calgary | -16.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Science

Greenland to become greener with climate change, scientists say

Greenland is about to become substantially greener, according to Danish scientists who have been studying the effects of the warming climate on northern regions.

Country will be able to host forests by 2100

Ice-bound landscapes of Greenland could be covered by forests, with trees that exist in present-day Western Canada, by the year 2100, according to climate models. (Ian Joughlin/Associated Press)

Greenland is about to become substantially greener, according to Danish scientists who have been studying the effects of the warming climate on northern regions.

Using models, an international research group has examined what kind of species might grow there in the climate that Greenland is expected to have in the year 2100.

The models foretell the emergence of forests, replacing the current environment that only hosts four species of trees and large bushes.

"Forests like the coastal coniferous forests in today's Alaska and Western Canada will be able to thrive in fairly large parts of Greenland, with trees such as Sitka spruce and lodgepole pine," says Jens-Christian Svenning, a professor of biology at Aarhus University in Denmark.

Svenning is a member of the research group that presented its findings to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Analysis shows that many of the 44 key species of North American and European trees and bushes will thrive in Greenlands future climes.

A considerable number of species would already be able to grow in Greenland today, say the scientists.Trees such as white spruce, the Eastern balsam poplar and Siberian larch have been planted in Greenland in experiments and shown to be able to grow.

Svenning also says Greenland has the "potential to become a lot greener" in its southern half, where flora will be able to flourish in ice-free zones.

However, hewarns that with warming comes the prevalence of more humanswho have a penchant for introducing new plants and bushes to their environment.

"Such plantings could have a huge impact on the Greenlandic countryside of the futureif importing and planting species takes place without any control, this could lead to nature developing in a very chaotic way."