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The Brazilian Cerrado is becoming hotter and drier

Gabriel Selbach Hofmann, Manoel Cardoso, Ruy José Válka Alves, Eliseu José Weber, Alexandre Augusto Barbosa, Peter Mann de Toledo, Francisco B. Pontual, Leandro O. Salles, Heinrich Hasenack, José Luís Passos Cordeiro, Francisco Eliseu Aquino, Luiz Flamarion Barbosa de Oliveira

2021Global Change Biology194 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Brazilian Cerrado is a global biodiversity hotspot with notoriously high rates of native vegetation suppression and wildfires over the past three decades. As a result, climate change can already be detected at both local and regional scales. In this study, we used three different approaches based on independent datasets to investigate possible changes in the daytime and nighttime temperature and air humidity between the peak of the dry season and the beginning of the rainy season in the Brazilian Cerrado. Additionally, we evaluated the tendency of dew point depression, considering it as a proxy to assess impacts on biodiversity. Monthly increases of 2.2-4.0℃ in the maximum temperatures and 2.4-2.8℃ in the minimum temperatures between 1961 and 2019 were recorded, supported by all analyzed datasets which included direct observations, remote sensing, and modeling data. The warming raised the vapor pressure deficit, and although we recorded an upward trend in absolute humidity, relative humidity has reduced by ~15%. If these tendencies are maintained, gradual air warming will make nightly cooling insufficient to reach the dew point in the early hours of the night. Therefore, it will progressively reduce both the amount and duration of nocturnal dewfall, which is the main source of water for numerous plants and animal species of the Brazilian Cerrado during the dry season. Through several examples, we hypothesize that these climate changes can have a high impact on biodiversity and potentially cause ecosystems to collapse. We emphasize that the effects of temperature and humidity on Cerrado ecosystems cannot be neglected and should be further explored from a land use perspective.

Topics & Concepts

Dew pointDewEnvironmental scienceClimate changeHumidityBiodiversityDry seasonVapour Pressure DeficitEcosystemVegetation (pathology)Relative humidityWet seasonGlobal warmingAtmospheric sciencesGeographyClimatologyEcologyTranspirationMeteorologyBiologyPathologyGeologyMedicineBotanyCondensationPhotosynthesisPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsRemote Sensing in AgricultureEnvironmental and biological studies
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