Fire and drought may push Amazonian forests beyond tipping point
14
April, 2014
Future
simulations of climate in the Amazon suggest a longer dry season
leading to more drought and fires. Woods Hole Research Center
scientists Michael Coe, Paulo Brando, Marcia Macedo and colleagues
have published a new study on the impacts of fire and drought on
Amazon tree mortality. Their paper entitled "Abrupt increases in
Amazonian tree mortality due to drought-fire interactions,"
published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
found that prolonged droughts caused more intense and widespread
wildfires, which consumed more forests in Amazonia than previously
understood.
Over
an eight-year period, the team repeatedly burned 50-hectare forest
plots in southeast Amazonia to learn how fire frequency and weather
conditions affected tree deaths. The surprise, according to Dr. Coe,
was "the importance of drought. The forest didn't burn much in
average years, but burned extensively in drought years." Climate
change is expected to cause shorter more intense rainy seasons and
longer dry seasons, with more frequent droughts like those observed
in this study. According to Dr. Coe, "We tend to think only
about average conditions but it is the non-average conditions we have
to worry about."
NASA
satellite data provide a regional context for results from the
experimental burns. In 2007, fires in southeast Amazonia burned 10
times more forest than in an average climate year, "an area
equivalent to a million soccer fields" according to co-author
Douglas Morton of NASA.
Large
portions of Amazonian forests are already experiencing droughts and
are increasingly susceptible to fire. "Agricultural development
has created smaller forest fragments, which exposes forest edges to
the hotter dryer conditions in the surrounding landscape and makes
them vulnerable to escaped fires," said Dr. Macedo. "These
fragmented forests are more likely to be invaded by flammable
grasses, which further increase the likelihood and intensity of
future fires."
According
to lead-author Dr. Paulo Brando, "This study shows that fires
are already degrading large areas of forests in Southern Amazonia and
highlights the need to include interactions between extreme weather
events and fire when attempting to predict the future of Amazonian
forests under a changing climate."
"None
of the models used to evaluate future Amazon forest health include
fire, so most predictions grossly underestimate the amount of tree
death and overestimate overall forest health," said Dr. Coe. The
results of this project show that extreme droughts may interact with
fires to push Amazonian forests beyond a tipping point that may
abruptly increase tree mortality and change vegetation over large
areas.
Explore
further:
More
information: Abrupt increases in Amazonian tree mortality due to
drought–fire interactions,
www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1305499111
Journal
reference: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Provided
by Woods Hole Research Center
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