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Won’t more CO2 help plants grow?
Podcast |
TILclimate
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Natural Sciences
Science
Social Sciences
Publication Date |
Mar 28, 2024
Episode Duration |
00:08:50

Plants take in CO2 from the air to grow—and today’s atmosphere has about 50% more CO2 than it did before we started burning massive amounts of fossil fuels. So, is that great news for plants? Prof. David Des Marais, a plant ecologist at MIT, helps answer this listener question.

For a deeper dive and additional resources related to this episode, visit: 

For more episodes of TILclimate by the MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative, visit tilclimate.mit.edu

 

Credits

Laur Hesse Fisher, Host and Executive Producer

David Lishansky, Editor and Producer

Aaron Krol, Writer and Producer

Andrew Moseman, Science Reporter

Michelle Harris, Fact Checker

Music by Blue Dot Sessions

Artwork by Aaron Krol

Plants take in CO2 from the air to grow—and today’s atmosphere has about 50% more CO2 than it did before we started burning massive amounts of fossil fuels. So, is that great news for plants?

Plants take in CO2 from the air to grow—and today’s atmosphere has about 50% more CO2 than it did before we started burning massive amounts of fossil fuels. So, is that great news for plants? Prof. David Des Marais, a plant ecologist at MIT, helps answer this listener question.

For a deeper dive and additional resources related to this episode, visit: 

For more episodes of TILclimate by the MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative, visit tilclimate.mit.edu

 

Credits

Laur Hesse Fisher, Host and Executive Producer

David Lishansky, Editor and Producer

Aaron Krol, Writer and Producer

Andrew Moseman, Science Reporter

Michelle Harris, Fact Checker

Music by Blue Dot Sessions

Artwork by Aaron Krol

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