What do oceans and forests have in common?

What do oceans and forests have in common?

Here are the many similarities between the two ecosystems that represent the planet's largest carbon sinks.

Oceans absorb almost 30% of annual carbon emissions linked to human activity. (Envato Elements pic)

Like forests, oceans are often considered the lungs of the planet, and are invaluable in the fight against climate change.

Ahead of the adoption of the first-ever United Nations international high-seas treaty on Monday, designed to provide a framework for ocean conservation, here are the many similarities between these two types of ecosystems that represent the planet’s largest carbon sinks.

Indispensable in the fight against global warming, oceans absorb almost 30% of annual carbon emissions linked to human activity. It’s an impressive figure that makes these ecosystems one of the planet’s greatest allies in the fight against global warming.

Most of the oceans’ capacity to absorb CO2 emissions comes from phytoplankton, which act as photosynthesisers – a process very similar to that of trees.

As the planet’s largest carbon sinks, along with the oceans, forests can also absorb impressive quantities. The mass of CO2 that a tree can absorb ranges from 10-50kg per year, depending on its age, size and planting area.

Oceans and forests share another major common feature: they are both home to an impressive biodiversity. Oceans are the habitat of no fewer than 280,000 species, which also play a crucial role in climate regulation.

Some, for example, are capable of burying carbon deep underground. This is particularly true of zooplankton, which feed on the carbon absorbed by phytoplankton, and seagrass meadows, which could absorb up to 10% of greenhouse-gas emissions.

Forests cover almost a third, or 31%, of global land area, spanning some 4 bil hectares. (File pic)

Forests too, represent an immense reservoir of biodiversity, home to some 50,000 species. In fact, some specific ecosystems found in oceans and in other coastal areas such as rockweed, meadows, kelp forests, mangroves and salt marshes, are even referred to as “blue forests”.

Unfortunately, oceans, like forests, are under serious threat from climate change and phenomena such as ocean acidification, rising sea levels, coral bleaching, deforestation and megafires. In 2021, a study revealed that the Amazon – the planet’s largest rainforest – now releases more carbon than it absorbs.

Forests alone account for three-quarters of the endangered species on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List. According to this list, climate change is likely to have an impact on at least 41% of threatened marine species.

And the outlook doesn’t look promising, since, according to recent research, human-induced warming of the world has been increasing at an unprecedented rate of more than 0.2°C per decade.

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