|
R
|
ising carbon dioxide
concentrations are causing vegetation across large parts of Australia to grow
more quickly, in turn consuming more water and reducing flows into river
basins.
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| Carbon dioxide increases plant growth, but thirsty plants flows into river basins. |
Our research, published today in Nature Climate Change,
shows that river flows have decreased by 24-28% in a large part of Australia
due to increasing CO₂ levels, which have risen by 14% since the early 1980s.
This could exacerbate water scarcity in several populated
and agriculturally important regions.
Read the story about this complicating impact of climate
change on The Conversation by a Research
Associate, Climate Change Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Anna
Ukkola; and the Professor of Water Science and Management, Fenner School of
Environment and Society, Australian National University, Albert Van Dijk - “Riverflows drop as carbon dioxide creates thirstier plants”.

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