User Tools

    To create and edit articles, please register and log-in

Main Menu : categories & index etc.

Main menu
Click categories to expand


A-Z listingplugin-autotooltip__plain plugin-autotooltip_bigA-Z listing

This is an alphabetical index of all content pages.


Other categories

Utilities

Contact
Register
Sandbox

Also see

Importance Ratings
News
Legal
Donate/Sponsor
Curator's rationale
AI Policy



Twitter feed 𝕏



Feeds + s.e.o. etc.
rss / xml feed
sitemap file
A-Z listing (archived)


Indexed under : Earth Sciences

Wikenigma - an Encyclopedia of Unknowns Wikenigma - an Encyclopedia of the Unknown

Isoprene emissions from plants

Isoprene is a simple organic molecule ( C5H8 , or, more accurately CH2=C(CH3)βˆ’CH=CH2 ) which is emitted into the atmosphere by (some) plants - notably oaks, poplars, eucalyptus and pines. The first report of isoprene emissions from plants was published in 1957.

It's now known to be the second most prominent hydrocarbon in the atmosphere (after methane) - with global emissions estimated at 600 million metric tons per year.

As well as being a potential 'Greenhouse Gas' itself * isoprene levels have been found to affect the ozone and particulate content of the atmosphere.

The complex feedback mechanisms for isoprene production from plants are poorly understood. For example, the levels of isoprene tend to drop as CO2 levels rise - but the reasons are not clear.

In addition, the biological reasons for the evolution of isoprene emissions are unknown. As are the reasons why some plants emit the compound and other don't.

It's also unclear how climate change will affect future levels of isoprene (and vice versa)

[…] estimates of how isoprene emission will change in the future are not approaching consensus. Even the direction of change, whether increasing or decreasing with climate change, is under debate.

Source : Plant, Cell & Environment, Open AccessVolume 37, Issue 8 p. 1727-1740

The lack of knowledge about the bi-directional feedback effects of isoprene in the atmosphere make the construction of accurate computer models of climate change more problematic.

Incorporating a mechanistic treatment of isoprene emissions within land-surface schemes has recently become a focus for the modelling community, the aim being to quantify the potential magnitude of associated climate feedbacks. However, these efforts are hampered by major uncertainties about why plants emit isoprene and the relative importance of different environmental controls on isoprene emission.

Source : Atmospheric Environment, Volume 43, Issue 39, December 2009, Pages 6121-6135

Further reading Isoprene research – 60 years later, the biology is still enigmatic Open Access Plant, Cell & Environment, Volume 40, Issue 9 p. 1671-1678

* Editor's Note : There seems to be limited research into the effects of isoprene itself as a simple 'Greenhouse Gas'. References needed.


    Please share this page to help promote Wikenigma !

Dear reader : Do you have any suggestions for the site's content?

Ideas for new topics, and suggested additions / corrections for older ones, are always welcome.

If you have skills or interests in a particular field, and have suggestions for Wikenigma, get in touch !


Or, if you'd like to become a regular contributor . . . request a login password. Registered users can edit the entire content of the site, and also create new pages.

( The 'Notes for contributors' section in the main menu has further information and guidelines etc.)

Automatic Translation

You are currently viewing an auto-translated version of Wikenigma

Please be aware that no automatic translation engines are 100% accurate, and so the auto-translated content will very probably feature errors and omissions.

Nevertheless, Wikenigma hopes that the translated content will help to attract a wider global audience.

Show another (random) article

Further resources :

DOKUWIKI IMPLEMENTATION DESIGN BY UNIV.ORG.UK NOVEMBER 2023