New research is using drones to tackle climate change

 Liana_in_Danum_Valley
09 Jan 2019 10:08:23.840

PA 01/18

A team of Nottingham scientists is using drones to survey woody climbing plants and better understand how they may affect the carbon balance of tropical rainforests.

The findings of the study – ‘A view from above: Unmanned Aerial Vehicles provide a new tool for assessing liana infestation in tropical forest canopies’, have been published today in the Journal of Applied Ecology.

Tropical forests play a vital role in the global carbon cycle. They store over 30 per cent of terrestrial carbon and contribute to 40 per cent of the global carbon sink. We depend on the trees found in these tropical areas to take up some of the carbon dioxide that we are emitting, so not all of our emissions end up in the atmosphere.

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More information is available from Catherine Waite from the School of Geography at the University of Nottingham, by email at catherine.waite@nottingham.ac.uk
CharlotteAnscombe

Charlotte Anscombe – Media Relations Manager (Arts and Social Sciences)

Email: charlotte.anscombe@nottingham.ac.uk  Phone:+44 (0)115 74 84 417 Location: University Park

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