Amazon
Rainforest is ‘at Higher Risk of Tree Loss’
With dry seasons lasting longer in the southern Amazon, rainforests could suffer and, if damage is severe enough, massive amounts of carbon currently stored in plants and the soil could be released into the atmosphere.
Credit: Jubasi/Wikimedia Commons via Climate News Network
27
October, 2013
LONDON
– Researchers say the southern part of the Amazon rainforest is at
a far higher risk of dieback than the models used in the most recent
report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
The
research team, led by Professor Rong Fu of the University of Texas,
say that this is because the forest is drying out much quicker than
projected.
If
the damage is severe enough, they say the loss of rainforest could
cause the release of large volumes of carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere, and could also disrupt plant and animal communities in
one of the world’s most biodiversity-rich regions, as outlined in
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The
team used ground-based rainfall measurements from the past three
decades. Findings showed that since 1979, the dry season in southern
Amazonia lasted about a week longer in each decade.
At
the same time, the annual fire seasons have become longer. The
researchers say the most likely explanation for the increasingly
longer dry seasons is global warming.
“The
dry season over the southern Amazon is already marginal for
maintaining rainforest,” says Professor Fu. “At some point, if it
becomes too long, the rainforest will reach a tipping point.”
She
says the length of the dry season is the most important climate
factor controlling the southern Amazon rainforest. If it is too long,
the forest will not survive.
A
study published earlier this year suggested that rainforests
worldwide might be able to withstand the impacts of climate change
more successfully than thought.
The
new results also contrast sharply with forecasts made by the models
used by the IPCC: even under future scenarios in which greenhouse
gases rise dramatically, those models project the southern Amazon dry
season will be at most 10 days longer by the end of the century, and
that the risk of climate change-induced rainforest dieback should
therefore be relatively low.
Rainfall
limited
Professor
Fu and her colleagues say the water stored in the forest soil at the
end of each wet season is all that the trees have to last them
through the dry months. The longer that lasts – regardless of how
wet the wet season was – the more stressed the trees become and the
more susceptible they are to forest fires.
Findings
from a recent study show that since 1979, the dry season in southern
Amazonia has stretched about a week longer per decade.
Credit:
Darren and Sandy Van Soye/flickr
They
say the most likely explanation for the lengthening dry season in
recent decades is human-caused greenhouse warming, which inhibits
rainfall in two ways: It makes it harder for warm, dry air near the
surface to rise and freely mix with cool, moist air above; and it
blocks incursions by cold weather fronts from outside the tropics
which could trigger rainfall.
The
team says the IPCC’s climate models represent these processes
poorly, which might explain why they project only a slightly longer
Amazonian dry season.
The
Amazon rainforest normally acts as a carbon sink, removing
atmospheric carbon dioxide and storing it. But during a severe
drought in 2005 it went into reverse, releasing 1 petagram of carbon
(1 billion tons – about one-tenth of annual human emissions) to the
atmosphere.
Fu
and her colleagues estimate that if dry seasons continue to lengthen
at just half the rate seen in recent decades, the 2005 Amazon drought
could become the norm rather than the exception by the end of this
century.
Some
scientists think the combination of longer dry seasons, higher
surface temperatures and more fragmented forests caused by
deforestation could eventually convert much of southern Amazonia from
rainforest to savanna.
Earlier
studies have shown that human-caused deforestation in the Amazon can
alter rainfall patterns. But the researchers did not see a strong
sign of that in the pattern of increasing dry season length. That was
most pronounced in the south-western Amazon, while the most intense
deforestation occurred in the south-east.
Because
the north western Amazon has much higher rainfall and a shorter dry
season than the south, the researchers think it is much less
vulnerable to climate change
Alex
Kirby, a former BBC environment correspondent, is a founding
journalist of Climate News Network. Climate News Network is a news
service led by four veteran British environmental reporters and
broadcasters. It delivers news and commentary about climate change
for free to media outlets worldwide.
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