Abstract
AbstractThe emergence of forests on Earth (~385 million years ago, Ma)1has been linked to an order-of-magnitude decline in atmospheric CO2levels and global climatic cooling by altering continental weathering processes, but observational constraints on atmospheric CO2before the rise of forests carry large, often unbound, uncertainties. Here, we calibrate a mechanistic model for gas exchange in modern lycophytes and constrain atmospheric CO2levels 410–380 Ma from related fossilized plants with bound uncertainties of approximately ±100 ppm (1 sd). We find that the atmosphere contained ~525–715 ppm CO2before continents were afforested, and that Earth was partially glaciated according to a palaeoclimate model. A process-driven biogeochemical model (COPSE) shows the appearance of trees with deep roots did not dramatically enhance atmospheric CO2removal. Rather, shallow-rooted vascular ecosystems could have simultaneously caused abrupt atmospheric oxygenation and climatic cooling long before the rise of forests, although earlier CO2levels are still unknown.
Funder
Carlsbergfondet
Natur og Univers, Det Frie Forskningsråd
Hessisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst
VeWA consortium (Past Warm Periods as Natural Analogues of our high-CO2 Climate Future) by the LOEWE programme of the Hessen Ministry of Higher Education, Research and the Arts, Germany.
1) European Development Research Fund (ERDF) 2) German Federal Ministry of Education and Research and Land Brandenburg
RCUK | Natural Environment Research Council
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary
Cited by
5 articles.
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