Abrupt increases in Amazonian tree mortality due to drought–fire interactions

14 de abril de 2014

abr 14, 2014

Paulo Brando, Jennifer K. Balch, Daniel C. Nepstad, Douglas C. Morton, Francis E. Putz, Michael T. Coe, Divino Silvério, Marcia N. Macedo, Eric A. Davidson, Caroline C. Nóbrega, Ane Alencar, Britaldo S. Soares-Filho

Interactions between climate and land-use change may drive widespread degradation of Amazonian forests. High-intensity fires associated with extreme weather events could accelerate this degradation by abruptly increasing tree mortality, but this process remains poorly understood.

Here we present, to our knowledge, the first field-based evidence of a tipping point in Amazon forests due to altered fire regimes. Based on results of a large-scale, long-term experiment with annual and triennial burn regimes (B1yr and B3yr, respectively) in the Amazon, we found abrupt increases in fire-induced tree mortality (226 and 462%) during a severe drought event, when fuel loads and air temperatures were substantially higher and relative humidity was lower than long-term averages. This threshold mortality response had a cascading effect, causing sharp declines in canopy cover (23 and 31%) and aboveground live biomass (12 and 30%) and favoring widespread invasion by flammable grasses across the forest edge area (80 and 63%), where fires were most intense (e.g., 220 and 820 kW⋅m−1).

During the droughts of 2007 and 2010, regional forest fires burned 12 and 5% of southeastern Amazon forests, respectively, compared with <1% in nondrought years. These results show that a few extreme drought events, coupled with forest fragmentation and anthropogenic ignition sources, are already causing widespread fire-induced tree mortality and forest degradation across southeastern Amazon forests. Future projections of vegetation responses to climate change across drier portions of the Amazon require more than simulation of global climate forcing alone and must also include interactions of extreme weather events, fire, and land-use change.

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Boletim “Tanguro em Pauta” – 3

Boletim “Tanguro em Pauta” – 3

Pesquisadores do Projeto Tanguro estudam desde 2008 os impactos da produ­ção agrícola no meio ambiente para entender como intensificar sem prejudicar a natureza. Confira na terceira edição do “Tanguro em Pauta” a impor­tância de manter a integridade das matas ciliares em um ambiente agrícola e os experimentos que investigam o comportamento de fertilizantes no solo.