Don’t give a moose a muffin.

The following is press release courtesy of The Norwegian University of Science and Technology:

Climate researchers have long known that large animals, like moose, could play a role in how much the Earth will warm due to climate change. But the question is, how much? New research shows the answer can be a lot.

One of the biggest potential single sources of carbon emissions from wooded parts of Norway has four legs, weighs as much as 400-550 kg and has antlers.

That’s right — moose can reduce carbon storage in clearcut sites equivalent to as much as 60 percent of the annual fossil fuel carbon emissions from a region, a new study shows.

Moose are an ecosystem engineer in the forest ecosystem, and strongly impact everything from the species composition and nutrient availability in the forest.

This photo shows just how dramatic the difference is between areas where moose have grazed and have not grazed. Courtesy: Audun Hageskal/SustHerb project

Moose are an ecosystem engineer in the forest ecosystem, and strongly impact everything from the species composition and nutrient availability in the forest. A grown animal can eat 50 kilograms of biomass each day during summer.

Said Gunnar Austrheim, an ecologist at the NTNU University Museum who was one of the study’s co-authors.

That consumption represents roughly 10 percent of what the Norwegian forest industry itself harvests, he said.

And therein lies the reason why moose can be responsible for such a large additional amount of carbon emissions, said Francesco Cherubini, director of NTNU’s Industrial Ecology (IndEcol) Programme, and co-author of the paper.

Moose Influence Vegetation Growth And More

Moose like to eat young deciduous trees, like birch, rowan and willow. So the young saplings that would normally sprout in the forest after a timber company clearcuts an area never get the chance to grow.

When saplings grow into mature trees, they bind up CO2 in their trunks, leaves and roots. Moose essentially gobble up that possible source of carbon storage.

It was really a surprise to see how much moose can influence vegetation growth, the carbon cycle and the climate system.

Said Xiangping Hu, a researcher at IndEcol and co-author of the study.

Scientists have known that browsing by large animals like moose could be an unaccounted-for source of additional carbon emissions, but there are very few studies with actual numbers to say precisely how much, Hu said.

Filling In The Unknowns In Climate Modelling

Researchers use computer models to try to predict future climate scenarios, based on current and expected emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gasses.

That’s basically the information we get from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC.

Most recently, the IPCC said humanity is on track to raise the Earth’s average temperate by 2.4 C, which is quite a bit higher than the 1.5 C goal that scientists agree we should aim for.

The challenge is that climate modelling is imperfect. It’s getting better, but there are areas where researchers simply don’t have enough information yet.

They know there are factors that should be in their climate models, but they simply don’t have enough data to include those factors in a realistic way.

The effects of large animals are one of those factors, Cherubini said.

One of the biggest unknowns that we have in our understanding of the climate system and the carbon cycle is potentially the effect of larger animals, and how they interact with carbon storage in vegetation.

This study gave us a great opportunity to quantify this effect. We have some numbers that we can relate to the regional carbon budget, and which actually show the importance of large animals like the moose.

He said.

Good For The Forest Industry, Maybe Not So Good For The Climate

The researchers were able to discover the importance of moose on climate as a result of a different, but related study that began in 2008.

At that time, researchers at NTNU and NINA ( the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research) wanted to know what effect moose had on the forest ecosystem after an area had been clearcut. They looked at vegetation regrowth, species diversity and soil nutrient dynamics. Clearcutting is a process where essentially all trees are harvested from an area.

Researchers in the SustHerb project, which provided the foundation for the new study, continuously tracked changes in forest diversity and structure as affected by grazing moose. The changes can take years to manifest. Photo: Anders L. Kolstad, NTNU University Museum

So the researchers set up 47 paired plots in areas that had been clearcut in the previous three years. One of the plot pairs was fenced off so that moose couldn’t browse on the tasty new saplings that naturally spring up after an area has been cut.

The second, nearby plot pair, was open to moose but marked so that researchers could go back year after year to see what happened to tree regrowth and other ecosystem metrics as moose feasted on the vegetation.

What they found was that moose were doing Norway’s forest industry a huge favour, Cherubini said.

“So the forest industry prefers coniferous species, they prefer pine, they prefer spruce. So moose to some extent, are helping them because they’re reducing competition,” by thinning out the deciduous trees and partly pine, leaving the spruce, he said.

Win For The Climate, Biodiversity And Forest Management?

The researchers realized they could revisit the plots to study effects on carbon emissions by calculating the differences in aboveground carbon content between browsed and unbrowsed plots.

An aerial photo of a moose exclosure (red box, inside which moose cannot access) at one of the post-harvest study sites, showing differences in tree density, height, and composition with the surrounding open areas (photo credits: Sten Ivar Tønsberg).

That enabled them to see potential additional carbon emissions that moose caused by eating deciduous saplings.

Birch and other highly selected deciduous species such as rowan, willow and aspen may also help contribute to the biodiversity of an area, Austrheim said, which moose also affect by removing those species.

So while moose were relatively good for the forest industry, they aren’t necessarily that good for the climate or biodiversity.

But there’s good news.

Finding A Balance

Almost all of Norway’s productive forests are harvested using clearcuts.

These clearcuts provide a lot of good food for moose.

Austrheim said. Moose are also very heavily managed in Norway, he said

Land managers could come up with an optimal plan that could be a win-win solution for climate, for biodiversity and for timber value.

We don’t only regulate the amount of animals, we very carefully regulate the proportion of females, males and calves. So there’s a  stronger management for moose than for most livestock in Norway.

He said

That means it should be possible to find the right balance between moose numbers and how forested lands are managed. That, in turn, could make it possible to limit excess carbon emissions, boost biodiversity and increase forest productivity, the researchers said.

I think as we get more of an understanding of how all these different things are interrelated, land managers could come up with an optimal plan. That could be a much needed win-win solution for climate, for biodiversity and for timber value.

Cherubini said

AUTHOR COMMENTARY

Sounds like a whole lot of Moojoo Voodoo.

[1] Be not thou envious against evil men, neither desire to be with them. [2] For their heart studieth destruction, and their lips talk of mischief.

Proverbs 24:1-2

These eco-warriors are absolutely nuts. Before it used to all be about tree-hugging, save the whales, and do things in a more natural and clear manner. Now it’s just turned into literally blaming everything on climate change and emissions, and therefore implying that we have to mitigate it, or just outright say it and destroy it in the name of “saving the climate.”

In 2021 I reported how a study claims that wild pigs are also big emitters because of how they rip up the toil soil, and that they should be controlled as to manage the supposed emissions.

SEE: Propaganda Study Says Wild Pigs Emit More Carbon Than One Million Cars. Calls For Their Control

I have also noted on different occasions that the media and scientists have blamed deer for being harbingers and spreaders of Covid variants. At this rate you might as well blame moose, too.

SEE: Canadian Scientists Claim To Have Discovered A New Covid Variant In Deer That Could Spread To Humans

This of course lends itself to the anti-meat philosophy these Cretans hold to.

[1] Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils; [2] Speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron; [3] Forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth.

1 Timothy 4:1-3

[7] Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges? who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof? or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock? [8] Say I these things as a man? or saith not the law the same also? [9] For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen? [10] Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? For our sakes, no doubt, this is written: that he that ploweth should plow in hope; and that he that thresheth in hope should be partaker of his hope. (1 Corinthians 9:7-10).

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7 Comments

  • I grew up watching Rocky Squirrel and Bullwinkle J. Moose cartoons, and the moose can do no wrong. However, a lot of Catholic pansies in Norway and the UN, who all seem to have such a mentality of deprivation and lack, can do much wrong. Faithless reprobates, every one of them.

  • Insanity. And I thought moose were only North American: go figure. A lot of ‘moose’ in yesterday’s news. You had this, & you had the guy who supposedly murdered a pervert stalking his daughter with ‘moose antlers’. Somehow I had a hard time envisioning that. Maybe the guy just had a vac heart attack at the shock of a man standing up for & defending his own.

  • PSYCHOSCIENCE IS BORN. these “things” that LOOK human but are not even CLOSE to being human are arriving at a conclusion and creating psychofacts to support their conclusions. Scientific method i was taught is absolutely been twisted as well to accomodate whatever conclusions these creatures want to try to justify and claim it is “science”.

    cockroaches are smarter than this. Even roaches, fleas, ants, you name it, have strong survival iinstincts. Psychoscientists are so DUMB they don’t even realize their warped thinking and methodologies will ultimately lead to their demise… Homo sapiens: FAILED SPECIES.

  • these reseachers on the moose sound mentally unhealthy and should be examined for a long period of time. as it seems they have no knowlegde or wisdom in their field of study. MANKIND without godliness is a cancer on the Earth but all animals and plants THRIVE IN HARMONY on the Earth keeping perpetual perfect balance WHILST RESTORING EARTH TO ITS ORIGINAL PARADISE STATE.

    1 Timothy 6:20
    O Timothy, keep that which is committed to thy trust, avoiding profane and vain babblings, and oppositions of science falsely so called:

  • PSYCHOSCIENCE IS BORN. these “things” that LOOK human but are not even CLOSE to being human are arriving at a conclusion and creating psychofacts to support their conclusions. Scientific method i was taught is absolutely been twisted as well to accomodate whatever conclusions these creatures want to try to justify and claim it is “science”.

    cockroaches are smarter than this. Even roaches, fleas, ants, you name it, have strong survival iinstincts. Psychoscientists are so DUMB they don’t even realize their warped thinking and methodologies will ultimately lead to their demise… Homo sapiens: FAILED SPECIES. the only species needing removal is US

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