The Amazon’s carbon sink is slipping

Publicly released:
New Zealand; International
PHOTO: Pixabay
PHOTO: Pixabay

Some parts of the Amazon rainforest are now emitting more carbon than storing it, which may be a result of deforestation and regional climate change, according to new research. For almost 20 years, researchers measured the carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide in the low atmosphere over four sites in the Brazilian Amazon. They found total carbon emissions were greater in eastern Amazon than in the western region, and that the southeastern region switched from being a carbon sink to being a substantial source of carbon over the study period. The study team says intensifying dry seasons and increasing deforestation seem to promote ecosystem stress, the number of fires, and higher carbon emissions in the eastern Amazon.

News release

From: Springer Nature

Deforestation and regional climate change may be threatening the atmospheric carbon buffering potential of the Amazon rainforest, suggests a paper published in Nature this week. Some regions are shown to be emitting more carbon than they absorb. These findings help us to better contextualize the long-term impacts of interactions between climate and human disturbances on the carbon balance of the world’s largest tropical forest.

The Amazon rainforest, or Amazonia, represents the greatest expanse of tropical forest in the world. As a result, the region plays a vital role in helping to accumulate and store atmospheric carbon. Factors such as human-induced deforestation and climate change are thought to have stimulated a decrease in the capacity of the carbon sink and altered the local balance of carbon gases, which is indicative of the health of an ecosystem.

Luciana Gatti and colleagues collated aircraft observations of carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide concentrations in the troposphere — the lowest layer of the Earth’s atmosphere — above Brazilian Amazonia from 2010 to 2018. Analysis of over 600 vertical profiles (extending from the surface to around 4.5 km above sea level) at four sites revealed that total carbon emissions in eastern Amazonia are greater than those in the west. More specifically, southeastern Amazonia is pinpointed as a particular net carbon emitter, switching from being a sink to being a substantial carbon source over the study period. The authors propose that stress inflicted on local ecosystems and an increase in fire occurrence — promoted by an intensification of the dry season and an increase in deforestation — may be responsible for these higher eastern carbon emissions.

By revealing an association between deforestation and climatic changes across Amazonia, this study suggests that such interactions may have lasting, negative consequences for both the carbon balance of the region and the fragility of its ecosystems.

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Journal/
conference:
Nature
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: GNS Science, National Institute for Space Research, Brazil; Nuclear and Energy Research Institute, Brazil; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, USA; University of Leeds, UK; University of Exeter, UK; see paper for full list of organisations.
Funder: State of Sao Paulo Science Foundation – FAPESP, UK Environmental Research Council (NERC) AMAZONICA project, NASA grants, European Research Council (ERC) under Horizon 2020, 7FP EU, MCTI/CNPq, CNPq.
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