Shrubs curb carbon emissions in China’s largest desert
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An experiment in western China over the past four decades shows that it is possible to tame the expansion of desert lands with greenery, and, in the process, pull excess carbon dioxide out of the sky.

Taklamakan Desert location. (PeterHermesFurian/iStock/Getty)

The sprawling greening project along the edges of China’s Taklamakan Desert is creating a visible and measurable carbon sink, even in one of the driest places on Earth, according to a study led by scientists at the University of California, Riverside. The project is an example of successful afforestation, which is an effort to plant trees or shrubs on previously barren land.

UCR atmospheric physicist King-Fai Li co-authored the study published in the Proceedings of the Nat…

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