NASA and University Researchers Find Link Between Amazon Fires and Devastating Hurricanes
This
map of ocean surface temperatures shows how warm waters in the North
Atlantic fueled Hurricane Katrina. NASA and UCI researchers have
found that the same conditions heighten fire risk in the Amazon
basin.
NASA,
15 August, 2015
Researchers
from the University of California, Irvine and NASA have uncovered a
remarkably strong link between high wildfire risk in the Amazon basin
and the devastating hurricanes that ravage North Atlantic shorelines.
The climate scientists’ findings are appearing in the
journal Geophysical
Research Lettersnear
the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina’s calamitous August 2005
landfall at New Orleans and the Gulf Coast.
"Hurricane
Katrina is, indeed, part of this story," said UCI Earth system
scientist James Randerson, senior author on the paper. "The
ocean conditions that led to a severe hurricane season in 2005 also
reduced atmospheric moisture flow to South America, contributing to a
once in a century dry spell in the Amazon. The timing of these events
is perfectly consistent with our research findings."
Lead
author Yang Chen discovered that in addition to the well-understood
east-west influence of El Niño on the Amazon, there is also a
north-south control on fire activity that is set by the state of the
tropical North Atlantic. The North Atlantic has two modes. In years
of high numbers of hurricanes and high fire risk, warm waters in the
North Atlantic help hurricanes develop and gather strength and speed
on their way to North American shores. They also tend to pull a large
belt of tropical rainfall – known as the Intertropical Convergence
Zone – to the north, Chen said, drawing moisture away from the
southern Amazon.
As
a consequence, ground water is not fully replenished by the end of
rainy season, so coming into the next dry spell, when there is less
water stored away in the soils, the plants can’t evaporate and
transpire as much water out through their stems and leaves into the
atmosphere. The atmosphere gets drier and drier, creating conditions
where fires can spread rapidly three to six months later.
Ground-clearing fires set by farmers for agriculture or new
deforestation can easily jump from fields to dense forests under
these conditions.
"Understory
fires in Amazon forests are extremely damaging, since most rainforest
trees are not adapted to fire," noted co-author Douglas Morton
at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "The
synchronization of forest damages from fires in South America and
tropical storms in North America highlights how important it is to
consider the Earth as a system."
The
team pored over years of historical storm and sea surface temperature
data from the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration and
fire data gathered by NASA satellites. The results showed a striking
pattern, a progression over the course of several months from a warm
condition in the tropical North Atlantic to a dry and fire-prone
southern Amazon, and more destructive hurricane landfalls in North
and Central America.
According
to Randerson, the importance of this study is that it may help
meteorologists develop better seasonal outlooks for drought and fire
risk in the Amazon, leveraging large investments by NOAA and other
agencies in understanding hurricanes.
"The
fires we see in the U.S. West are generally lightning-ignited,
whereas they are mostly human-ignited in the Amazon, but climate
change can have really large effects on the fire situation in both
regions," Randerson said. "Keeping fire out of the Amazon
basin is critical from a carbon cycle perspective. There’s a huge
amount of carbon stored in tropical forests. We really want to keep
the forests intact."
Brian
Bell
University of California, Irvine
University of California, Irvine
Last
Updated: Aug. 4, 2017
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