Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Canada's boreal forest locks up twice the carbon of a tropical rainforest

CanWest News Services Published: Monday, December 10, 2007
A new series of maps shows how Canada's boreal forest manages to lock up almost twice as much carbon as the same area of tropical forest. The three maps show where permafrost, peatlands and soil with organic carbon are located within the boreal forest that covers much of the country. Each is adept at storing the carbon that would otherwise contribute to the planet's climate change problem. This forest is to carbon what Fort Knox is to gold, said a senior scientist with the International Boreal Conservation Campaign. "It's an internationally important repository for carbon, built up over thousands of years," said Jeff Wells. "The maps document where and how these vital carbon reserves are distributed across Canada. We should do everything we can to ensure that the carbon in this storehouse is conserved." Canada's boreal forest stores an estimated 186 billion tons of carbon in its widespread forest and peatland ecosystems -- the equivalent of 27 years' worth of global carbon emissions from the burning of fossil fuels.

See maps at the International Boreal Conservation Campaign.

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