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RE: Elevated carbon dioxide level and plant productivity.
While CO2 can acidify an environment, I am unaware of harm CO2 in potential concentrations does to plants. Rather than limiting the CO2 they uptake, I suspect the reduction in stomatal density observed as CO2 concentrations increase is a result of the plant simply needing fewer to gain necessary CO2 to feed.
There are other limits on plants, including biogenic, which restrict their growth. Ecosystems are complex tradeoffs, and in the Pacific Northwest the apex tree in the forest is the Hemlock, not the Douglas Fir, which grows faster and taller. By tolerating the shade of the Doug Fir, the Hemlock can wait for it's competitor for canopy space to senesce and die, and then assume it's place.
Thanks for an excellent article!
Thanks for your invaluable contributions. I believe there are genetic aspects to these events in the long term. Even with fewer stomata, CO2 level can still rise. Does this mean a time might come when some plant species would have very minute stomata number or even at all? Perhaps no. This means there are complex genetic processes in play which scientists are perhaps yet to understand.
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