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Impacts of Protected Area Deforestation on Dry‐Season Regional Climate in the Brazilian Amazon

Fernando De Sales, Thaís Muniz Ottoni Santiago, Trent Biggs, Katrina Mullan, Erin O. Sills, Corrie Monteverde

2020Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Rainforest in protected areas in the Brazilian Amazon is at risk due to increasing economic pressures and recent weakening of environmental agencies and legislation by the federal administration. This study examines the impacts of deforestation in protected areas on dry‐season precipitation in the Brazilian state of Rondônia located in the southwestern Brazilian Amazon. Regional‐climate model simulations indicate that clearing protected forests in Rondônia would result in substantial changes to the surface energy balance, including increased sensible and decreased latent heat flux. Consequent changes to low‐level wind circulation would enhance moisture flux convergence and convection over the newly deforested areas, leading to enhanced rainfall in those areas. However, deforestation of protected areas would decrease dry season rainfall up to 30% in the existing agricultural region, with potentially important negative impacts on agricultural production. Additionally, our results indicate that following deforestation, the newly degraded areas will experience warmer and drier afternoons that could place the remaining natural vegetation under vapor deficit stress.

Topics & Concepts

Amazon rainforestDeforestation (computer science)Dry seasonVegetation (pathology)Environmental scienceGeographyClearingPrecipitationClimate changeWet seasonAgroforestryEcologyMeteorologyComputer scienceEconomicsPathologyMedicineCartographyBiologyProgramming languageFinanceClimate variability and modelsPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsAtmospheric aerosols and clouds
Impacts of Protected Area Deforestation on Dry‐Season Regional Climate in the Brazilian Amazon | Litcius