HomeSciencePlants failed to absorb carbon 56 million years ago — Are we near a repeat?

Plants failed to absorb carbon 56 million years ago — Are we near a repeat?

Plants pull carbon from air during photosynthesis. They store carbon in leaves, wood and roots. This process supports the global carbon cycle.

December 05, 2025 / 14:56 IST
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Ancient Carbon Collapse: Could Modern Plants Face the Same Fate? (Representative Image: Canva)
Ancient Carbon Collapse: Could Modern Plants Face the Same Fate? (Representative Image: Canva)

Global warming feels faster each year now. Many ask how plants cope today. Scientists warn that current change moves quickly. They fear plants cannot match rising heat. A new study offers clues from the past.

How do plants regulate climate change today?
Plants pull carbon from air during photosynthesis. They store carbon in leaves, wood and roots. This process supports the global carbon cycle. It also slows rapid warming across many regions. But strong climate shifts weaken plant functions fast. A study in Nature Communications explains this risk. It links ancient warming with today’s rapid crisis.

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What happened to plants during the PETM event?
The PETM caused sharp warming 56 million years ago. Global temperatures rose about 6°C very quickly. Carbon increased fast across many ecosystems worldwide. Researchers analysed fossil pollen and plant traits. They rebuilt ancient vegetation across multiple regions. Mid-latitude areas saw smaller drought-tolerant species dominate. Palms and ferns survived heat but stored less carbon. Arctic regions gained biomass under warm conditions. Yet global carbon storage still dropped for long periods. Ecosystems needed about 100,000 years to recover well.

Palm pollen from 56 million years ago found in the Bighorn Basin. (Image: ©Vera Korasidis)