Posted on November 30 2009 by zerofootprint and filed in Carbon Emissions, Energy + Climate, Health + Pollution
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Message: A recent study from the International Union for Conservation of Nature concluded [2] that marine ecosystems including seagrass meadows, mangroves and salt marshes have a much greater capacity to trap carbon than land carbon sinks such as forests, and should be protected. Two NOAA scientists were among a team of 31 who contributed to the Global Carbon Project report and the recent article, Trends in the sources and sinks of carbon dioxide [4], published in Nature Geosciences. Read Full Article http://www.zerofootprintfoundation.org/75836/
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