When it comes to understanding climate change, it's all about the dirt.
A new study by researchers at BYU, Duke and the USDA finds that soil plays an important role in controlling the planet's atmospheric future.
The researchers set out to find how intact ecosystems are responding to increased levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The earth's current atmospheric carbon dioxide is 390 parts per million, up from 260 parts per million at the start of the industrial revolution, and will likely rise to more than 500 parts per million in the coming decades.