Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/37980
Título: Tracking the impacts of El Niño drought and fire in human-modified Amazonian forests
Autor: Berenguer, Erika
Lennox, Gareth D.
Ferreira, Joice Nunes
Malhi, Yadvinder Singh
Aragao, L. E.O.C.
Barreto, Julia Rodrigues
del Bon Espírito-Santo, Fernando
Figueiredo, Axa Emanuelle Simões
França, Filipe M.
Gardner, Toby Alan
Joly, Carlos Alfredo
Palmeira, Alessandro Ferraz
Quesada, Carlos Alberto Nobre
Rossi, Liana Chesini
de Seixas, Marina Maria Moraes
Smith, Charlotte C.
Withey, Kieran Daniel
Barlow, Jos
Palavras-chave: Amazon
Degradation
El Niño
Forest fires
Logging
Data do documento: 2021
Revista: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
É parte de: Volume 118, Número 118
Abstract: With humanity facing an unprecedented climate crisis, the conservation of tropical forests has never been so important – their vast terrestrial carbon stocks can be turned into emissions by climatic and human disturbances. However, the duration of these effects is poorly understood, and it is unclear whether impacts are amplified in forests with a history of previous human disturbance. Here, we focus on the Amazonian epicenter of the 2015–16 El Niño, a region that encompasses 1.2% of the Brazilian Amazon. We quantify, at high temporal resolution, the impacts of an extreme El Niño (EN) drought and extensive forest fires on plant mortality and carbon loss in undisturbed and human-modified forests. Mortality remained higher than pre-El Niño levels for 36 mo in EN-drought–affected forests and for 30 mo in EN-fire–affected forests. In EN-fire–affected forests, human disturbance significantly increased plant mortality. Our investigation of the ecological and physiological predictors of tree mortality showed that trees with lower wood density, bark thickness and leaf nitrogen content, as well as those that experienced greater fire intensity, were more vulnerable. Across the region, the 2015–16 El Niño led to the death of an estimated 2.5 ± 0.3 billion stems, resulting in emissions of 495 ± 94 Tg CO2. Three years after the El Niño, plant growth and recruitment had offset only 37% of emissions. Our results show that limiting forest disturbance will not only help maintain carbon stocks, but will also maximize the resistance of Amazonian forests if fires do occur.* © 2021 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2019377118
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