Impact of vegetation albedo on the habitability of Earth-like exoplanets
Erica Bisesi, Giuseppe Murante, Antonello Provenzale, Lorenzo, Biasiotti, Jost von Hardenberg, Stavro Ivanovski, Michele Maris, Sergio, Monai, Laura Silva, Paolo Simonetti, Giovanni Vladilo

TL;DR
This study models how vegetation-induced changes in surface albedo influence the climate and habitability of Earth-like exoplanets, showing that vegetation can extend the habitable zone and improve planetary habitability.
Contribution
An updated Earth-like Surface Temperature Model incorporating dynamic vegetation types to assess their impact on planetary climate and habitability.
Findings
Vegetation increases average surface temperature compared to bare surfaces.
Different vegetation types affect climate differently due to their albedos.
Vegetation can extend the habitable zone beyond its traditional outer edge.
Abstract
Vegetation can modify the planetary surface albedo via the Charney mechanism, as plants are usually darker than the bare surface of the continents. We updated ESTM (Earth-like Surface Temperature Model) to incorporate the presence, distribution and evolution of two dynamically competing vegetation types that resemble grasslands and trees (the latter in the double stages of life: adults and seedlings). The newly developed model was applied to estimate how the climate-vegetation system reaches equilibrium across different rocky planetary configurations, and to assess its impact on temperature and habitability. With respect to a world with bare granite continents, the effect of vegetation-albedo feedback is to increase the average surface temperature. Since grasses and trees exhibit different albedos, they affect temperature to different degrees. The ultimate impact on climate depends on…
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