Lawns May Contribute to Global Warming

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CORRECTION: Due to an error discovered in the scientific paper after this article was posted, the story below has been updated to remove a statement that emissions from lawn maintenance could "exceed four times" the carbon they end up storing, and replace it with “similar to or greater than.”

According to Jennifer Fitzenberger, assistant director of media relations at the University of California, Irvine: "Emissions from lawn maintenance are now 'similar to or greater than' the amount of carbon stored by ornamental grass in parks , depending on management intensity...There was a spreadsheet error in the scientific paper caught after our release went out, hence the revised numbers. The overall message still stands though, that turfgrass management can create more greenhouse gas than plants remove from atmosphere." Lush green lawns may not be as good for the environment as you might think.

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