More CO2 Is Good For Plant Life University Of Wyoming Study Shows
Without CO2, this would be a dead planet.
CO2 is a major part of the cycle of life on Earth.
You should have learned in school that carbon dioxide is used by plants, in part, to create energy through a process called photosynthesis. Plants take in CO2, remove the carbon molecule and use it for growth, then release the O2. Oxygen breathing life will then inhale the O2 and exhale it with a carbon molecule attached (CO2). This is the cycle of life.
Numerous studies have been done in green houses where extra CO2 was pumped in to see the effect. The results are amazing. The plants that get more CO2 are bigger, lusher, greener. You can watch a video on that here.
A recent study conducted at the University Of Wyoming finds that increased amounts of CO2 would help the grasslands of Wyoming.
David Williams, a botany professor at the University of Wyoming, and his team conducted a controlled study.
They surrounded grass with heaters and pumped carbon dioxide in to simulate a warmer planet with more CO2 in the air.
"The responses to these changing conditions are very species-specific," said Professor Williams, "Some species respond very favorably, others don't respond as much or at all to this increase in carbon dioxide." (WYOMING PUBLIC MEDIA).
So, the observed results were, some responded "favorably," some not as much, some not at all. This is the same results found in other lab tests using greenhouses and extra CO2.
So, extra CO2 is a good thing. It did not kill the plants, it helped most of them to become healthier.
Did you know that you can buy a CO2 emitter for a home greenhouse? You can see those products here. Folks who grown indoors, professionally and for backyard greenhouses, know the importance of CO2 and how more of it helps make a greener planet.
There have been many times in the past when the Earth was much warmer than it is today. But it was not warmer because of the CO2 levels. Still, when Earth was warmer CO2 life on this planet was more abundant than it is today. You can see an example of that by looking at the times around the Roman Empire, at this link.