Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/36451
Título: Reframing tropical savannization: linking changes in canopy structure to energy balance alterations that impact climate
Autor: Stark, Scott Christopher
Breshears, David D.
Aragón, Susan
Villegas, Juan Camilo
Law, Darin J.
Smith, Marielle N.
Minor, David M.
Assis, Rafael Leandro de
Almeida, Danilo Roberti Alves de
de Oliveira, Gabriel
Saleska, Scott Reid
Swann, Abigail S.
Moura, José Mauro Sousa De
Camargo, José Luís Campana
Silva, Rodrigo da
Aragǎo, Luiz Eduardo Oliveira C.Cruz De
Oliveira, Raimundo Cosme
Palavras-chave: Amazon
Climate Change
Earth System Models
Energy Balance
forest transitions
Lidar
rapid field assessment
Savannization
Vegetation Structure
Data do documento: 2020
Revista: Ecosphere
É parte de: Volume 11
Abstract: Tropical ecosystems are undergoing unprecedented rates of degradation from deforestation, fire, and drought disturbances. The collective effects of these disturbances threaten to shift large portions of tropical ecosystems such as Amazon forests into savanna-like structure via tree loss, functional changes, and the emergence of fire (savannization). Changes from forest states to a more open savanna-like structure can affect local microclimates, surface energy fluxes, and biosphere–atmosphere interactions. A predominant type of ecosystem state change is the loss of tree cover and structural complexity in disturbed forest. Although important advances have been made contrasting energy fluxes between historically distinct old-growth forest and savanna systems, the emergence of secondary forests and savanna-like ecosystems necessitates a reframing to consider gradients of tree structure that span forest to savanna-like states at multiple scales. In this Innovative Viewpoint, we draw from the literature on forest–grassland continua to develop a framework to assess the consequences of tropical forest degradation on surface energy fluxes and canopy structure. We illustrate this framework for forest sites with contrasting canopy structure that ranges from simple, open, and savanna-like to complex and closed, representative of tropical wet forest, within two climatically distinct regions in the Amazon. Using a recently developed rapid field assessment approach, we quantify differences in cover, leaf area vertical profiles, surface roughness, albedo, and energy balance partitioning between adjacent sites and compare canopy structure with adjacent old-growth forest; more structurally simple forests displayed lower net radiation. To address forest–atmosphere feedback, we also consider the effects of canopy structure change on susceptibility to additional future disturbance. We illustrate a converse transition—recovery in structure following disturbance—measuring forest canopy structure 10 yr after the imposition of a 5-yr drought in the ground-breaking Seca Floresta experiment. Our approach strategically enables rapid characterization of surface properties relevant to vegetation models following degradation, and advances links between surface properties and canopy structure variables, increasingly available from remote sensing. Concluding, we hypothesize that understanding surface energy balance and microclimate change across degraded tropical forest states not only reveals critical atmospheric forcing, but also critical local-scale feedbacks from forest sensitivity to additional climate-linked disturbance. © 2020 The Authors.
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.3231
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