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Greenhouse Planet

How Rising CO2 Changes Plants and Life as We Know It

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The carbon dioxide that industrial civilization spews into the atmosphere has dramatic consequences for life on Earth that extend beyond climate change. CO2 levels directly affect plant growth, in turn affecting any kind of life that depends on plants—in other words, everything.
Greenhouse Planet reveals the stakes of increased CO2 for plants, people, and ecosystems—from crop yields to seasonal allergies and from wildfires to biodiversity. The veteran plant biologist Lewis H. Ziska describes the importance of plants for food, medicine, and culture and explores the complex ways higher CO2 concentrations alter the systems on which humanity relies. He explains the science of how increased CO2 affects various plant species and addresses the politicization and disinformation surrounding these facts.
Ziska confronts the claim that "CO2 is plant food," a longtime conservative talking point. While not exactly false, it is deeply misleading. CO2 doesn't just make "good" plants grow; it makes all plants grow. It makes poison ivy more poisonous, kudzu more prolific, cheatgrass more flammable. CO2 stimulates some species more than others: weeds fare particularly well and become harder to control. Many crops grow more abundantly but also become less nutritious. And the further effects of climate change will be formidable.
Detailing essential science with wit and panache, Greenhouse Planet is an indispensable book for all readers interested in the ripple effects of increasing CO2.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 8, 2022
      Biologist Ziska separates fact from fiction in this impassioned take on carbon dioxide’s “fundamental importance and existential consequences” for plantlife. He starts with “the ‘CO2 is plant food’ meme,” an idea seized upon by climate change deniers that maintains that more atmospheric carbon dioxide will be good for plants and the Earth. Not so, Ziska writes: the impacts of rising levels are “incredibly complex... and will affect—directly, fundamentally, and irrevocably—all life as we know it.” In establishing the importance of flora, the author covers how plants are used for pharmaceuticals, the history of humans’ relationship with weeds (“a corn plant may be desirable if you want to grow corn, but the following year, if you are growing soybeans... it will be considered a weed”), and how plants are used in religious practices. Ultimately, Ziska posits, rising levels of CO2 make invasive species more prone to catching fire and increase crop-hindering weed growth, among other disastrous effects. He ends with a plea for a reversal of “the political degradation of science” and takes aim at the Trump administration for the “unprecedented” degree of “censorship and political influence in denying science.” Climate activists will savor this rebuttal to bunk science.

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  • English

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