Researchers report in the journal Science that the 2010 drought was more
widespead than in 2005 - the last big one - with more trees probably
lost.
The 2005 drought had been termed a "one in a century" event.
In drought years, the Amazon region changes from being a net absorber of
carbon dioxide into a net emitter.
The scientists, from the UK and
Brazil, suggest this is further evidence of the Amazon's vulnerability
to rising global temperatures. They also suggest the days of the Amazon
forest curbing the impact of rising greenhouse gas emissions may be
coming to an end.
The 2010 drought saw the Amazon River at its lowest
levels for half a century, with several tributaries completely dry and
more than 20 municipalities declaring a state of emergency.
Research leader Simon Lewis, from the University of Leeds, is the scientist who
gained an apology from the Sunday Times newspaper last year over the
so-called "AmazonGate" affair. "It's difficult to detect patterns from
just two observed droughts, but to have them close together is
concerning," he told BBC News.
Both droughts were associated with
unusually warm seas in the Atlantic Ocean off the Brazilian coast. "If
that turns out to be driven by escalating greenhouse gas concentrations
in the atmosphere, it could imply that we'll see more drought years in
the near future," said Dr Lewis.
Current emissions pathways risk playing Russian roulette with the world's
largest rainforest”
Dr Simon Lewis
Leeds University
"If events like this do happen more often, the Amazon rainforest would
reach a point where it shifts from being a valuable carbon sink slowing
climate change to a major source of greenhouse gases."
Some computer
models of climate change - in particular, the one developed at the UK's
Hadley Centre - project more droughts across the region as the planet
warms, and a diminishing capacity to absorb CO2.
There are several ways
in which warming can turn greenhouse gas-absorbing forests into
emitters. In the Amazon, the principal mechanism is simply that trees
die and then rot; in addition, those trees are then not available to
absorb CO2 from the air.
Eye in the sky
For this research, scientists
used data from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), a
US/Japanese satellite that monitors rainfall in a belt extending either
side of the Equator.
Its observation showed that whereas the 2005
drought covered an area of
nearly two million sq km, in 2010 it
stretched for three million sq km. Following the 2005 drought,
scientists were able to study the impact on trees and work out the
relationship between the rainfall loss and the release of carbon.
In an average year, the basin absorbs about 1.5 billion tonnes of CO2 from the
atmosphere. By contrast, the impact of the 2005 drought, spread over a
number of years, was calculated as a release of five billion tonnes.
The new paper calculates the figure for 2010 as about eight billion tonnes,
as much as the annual emissions of China and Russia combined; but this,
the researchers acknowledge, is a first estimate.
"It could be that many
of the susceptible trees were killed off in 2005, which would reduce the
number killed last year," said Paulo Brando from the Amazon Institute of
Environmental Research (IPAM) in Belem, Brazil. "On the other hand, the
first drought may have weakened a large number of trees, so increasing
the number dying in the 2010 dry season."
Leeds University is part of a
research group that maintains about 130 land stations across the Amazon
region. If funds are forthcoming, the team will visit them all in the
coming months to gather first-hand data on tree deaths.
This should
provide for a more accurate estimate of the 2010 drought's contribution
to global emissions.
Closing the gate
The likely fate of the Amazon
under climate change came under focus early last year when, as one of a
series of attacks on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC), the Sunday Times newspaper accused the panel of having included
an unsubstantiated claim that up to 40% of the forest could be affected
by climate change in future.
It used quotes from Dr Lewis in support of its
claim. In fact, Dr Lewis was concerned about the region's vulnerability
and had sent the newspaper a sheaf of scientific papers to back the
case.
He told the newspaper that the IPCC had sourced its statement to a
report from environmental group WWF, when it should have referenced the
scientific papers WWF had used in its report. "In fact, the IPCC's
Amazon statement is supported by peer-reviewed scientific evidence," the
Sunday Times acknowledged in its apology. Commenting on that so-called
"AmazonGate" episode from the perspective of the new research, Dr Lewis
noted: "The notion that the Amazon is potentially very vulnerable to
droughts linked to climate change was reasonable and defensible at the
time, and is consistent with the new findings.
"If greenhouse gas
emissions contribute to Amazon droughts that in turn cause forests to
release carbon, this feedback loop would be extremely concerning.
"Put
more starkly, current emissions pathways risk playing Russian roulette
with the world's largest rainforest."
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