Special Report: Fight against Global
Warming
WASHINGTON, March 5 (Xinhua) -- The Amazon is surprisingly sensitive to
drought, which causes massive carbon loss in tropical forests, mainly through
killing trees, according to a 30-year study focusing on the world's largest
tropical forest.
"For years the Amazon forest has been helping to slow down climate change.
But relying on this subsidy from nature is extremely dangerous," said Professor
Oliver Phillips, from the University of Leeds in Britain and the lead author of
the research, whose findings are to be published on the journal Science on
Friday.
"If the earth's carbon sinks slow or go into reverse, as our results show
is possible, carbon dioxide levels will rise even faster. Deeper cuts in
emissions will be required to stabilize our climate."
The study, a global collaboration between more than 40 institutions, was
based on the unusual 2005 drought in the Amazon. This gave scientists a glimpse
into the region's future climate, in which a warming tropical North Atlantic may
cause hotter and more intense dry seasons.
The 2005 drought sharply reversed decades of carbon absorption, in which
Amazonia helped slow climate change.
In normal years the forest absorbs nearly 2 billion tons of carbon dioxide.
The drought caused a loss of more than 3 billion tons. The total impact of the
drought -- 5 billion extra tons of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere -- exceeds
the annual emissions of Europe and Japan combined.
"Visually, most of the forest appeared little affected, but our records
prove tree death rates accelerated. Because the region is so vast, even small
ecological effects can scale up to a large impact on the planet's carbon cycle,"
explained Phillips.
"Some species, including some important palm trees, were especially
vulnerable," said Peruvian botanist and co-author Abel Monteagudo, "showing that
drought threatens biodiversity too."
The Amazon accounts for more than half of the world's rainforest, covering
an area 25 times as great as the United Kingdom. No other ecosystem on Earth is
home to so many species nor exerts such control on the carbon cycle.
The study involved 68 scientists from 13 countries working in RAINFOR, a
unique research network dedicated to monitoring the Amazonian forests.
To calculate changes in carbon storage they examined more than 100 forest
plots across the Amazon's 600 million hectares, identified and measured over
100,000 trees, and recorded tree deaths as well as new trees. Weather patterns
were also carefully measured and mapped.
In the wake of the 2005 drought the RAINFOR team took advantage of this
huge natural experiment, and focused their measurements to assess how the
drought had affected the forest.
The study found that for at least 25 years the Amazon forest acted as a
vast carbon sink. A similar process has also been occurring in Africa. In fact,
over recent decades the tropical forests have absorbed one fifth of global
fossil fuel emissions.
But in 2005 this process was reversed. Tree deaths accelerated most where
drought was strongest, and locations subject even to mild drying were affected.
If repeated, Amazon droughts will accelerate climate warming and make future
droughts even more damaging.