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Pro-Palestinian protesters take over Columbia University building; renewables now power more than half of Minnesota's electricity; Report finds long-term Investment in rural areas improves resources; UNC makes it easier to transfer military expertise into college credits.

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Big Pharma uses red meat rhetoric in a fight over drug costs. A school shooting mother opposes guns for teachers. Campus protests against the Gaza war continue, and activists decry the killing of reporters there.

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More rural working-age people are dying young compared to their urban counterparts, the internet was a lifesaver for rural students during the pandemic but the connection has been broken for many, and conservationists believe a new rule governing public lands will protect them for future generations.

USGS Scientists Uproot Long-held Beliefs about Trees

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Friday, January 17, 2014   

HELENA, Mont. – A long-held belief about old trees has been uprooted.

A new study from the U.S. Geological Survey finds that trees' growth rates do not slow, as they get older and larger.

Instead, they keep putting on mass along with their years.

Study lead author Nate Stephenson is a forest ecologist with the USGS. He says if people did the same, we'd weigh well over a ton by retirement.

For trees, the finding changes what we know about how they store carbon, and has implications for forest management.

"About for every pound of mass a tree puts on, it's absorbing and sequestering about a half-pound of carbon," Stephenson stresses.

He says old, large trees are better at storing and absorbing carbon from the atmosphere.

And he points out that the rapid absorption rates mean old trees are the star players within forest carbon dynamics.

And that's also of interest in terms of the changing climate.

"Change is going to happen no matter what,” he says. “And if we want to project how forests are going to respond to that, we really have to get some of these key pieces right."

Trees around the world were studied for the report – more than 600,000 of them, from 400 species on six continents.




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