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Rate of tree die-off in Amazon higher than previous estimates – ‘These climate-change signals will start popping out of the noise faster and faster as the years go on’

Tuesday, February 5, 2013 9:40
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Desdemona Despair

This image taken from a helicopter shows the same blowdown region a few years after the 2005 storm that killed trees near Manaus, Brazil. Regrowing vegetation has covered up most of the downed trees, but some tree stems are still visible. Photo: Chambers, et al., 2013

1 February 2013 (mongabay.com) – The rate of tree mortality in the Amazon rainforest due to storm damage and drought is 9-17 percent higher than conventionally believed, reports a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Comparing Landsat satellite images with on-the-ground observations, researchers from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, INPA, Tulane University, and other institutions found that roughly half a million dead trees across a 1000-square-mile plot of Brazilian rainforest went unaccounted for over a 20 year period. The findings suggest that carbon emissions from storm damage could be higher than previously estimated.

“If these results hold for most tropical forests, then it would indicate that because we missed some of the mortality, then the contribution of these forests to the net sink might be less than previous studies have suggested,” said lead author Jeffrey Chambers of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, noting that a single storm in 2005 killed hundreds of millions of trees across the Amazon. […]

With climate models projecting stronger storms and more intense droughts as temperatures rise in the tropics, the results raise concerns about rainforests’ ability to store carbon, according to Chambers, who went on to add that the study will help improve the understanding of forests’ role in the climate system.

“These climate change signals will start popping out of the noise faster and faster as the years go on,” Chambers said. [more]

Rate of tree die-off in Amazon higher than conventionally believed



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