A NASA-funded study has revealed widespread reductions in the greenness of Amazon forests caused by last year's record-breaking drought. Computer models predict a changing climate with warmer temperatures and altered rainfall patterns, which could lead to rainforests being replaced by grasslands or woody savannas. Carbon stored in rotting wood would then be released into the atmosphere, accelerating global warming.
The drought sensitivity of Amazon rainforests is a subject of intense study. The United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has warned similar droughts could be more frequent in the Amazon region in the future.
"The greenness levels of Amazonian vegetation, a measure of its health,
decreased dramatically over an area more than three and one-half times the size
of Texas," said Liang Xu, the study's lead author from Boston University.
"It did not recover to normal levels, even after the drought ended in late
October 2010."
The comprehensive study was prepared by an international team of scientists
using more than a decade's worth of satellite data from NASA's Moderate
Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) and Tropical Rainfall Measuring
Mission (TRMM). Analysis of these data produced detailed maps of vegetation
greenness declines from the 2010 drought. The study has been accepted for publication
in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.
The authors first developed maps of drought-affected areas using thresholds of
below-average rainfall as a guide. Next, they identified affected vegetation
using two different greenness indexes as surrogates for green leaf area and
physiological functioning.
The maps show the 2010 drought reduced the greenness of approximately 965,000
square miles of vegetation in the Amazon, more than four times the area
affected by the last severe drought in 2005.
"The MODIS vegetation greenness data suggest a more widespread, severe and
long-lasting impact to Amazonian vegetation than what can be inferred based
solely on rainfall data," said Arindam Samanta, a co-lead author from Atmospheric
and Environmental Research Inc. in Lexington, Mass.
The severity of the 2010 drought also was seen in records of water levels in
rivers across the Amazon basin, including the Rio Negro which represents
rainfall levels over the entire western Amazon. Water levels started to fall in
August 2010, reaching record low levels in late October. Water levels only
began to rise with the arrival of rains later that winter.
"Last year was the driest year on record based on 109 years of Rio Negro
water level data at the Manaus harbor," said Marcos Costa, co-author from
the Federal University in Vicosa, Brazil. "For comparison, the lowest
level during the so-called once-in-a-century drought in 2005 was only eighth
lowest."
As anecdotal reports of a severe drought began to appear in the news media last
summer, the authors started near-real time processing of massive amounts of
satellite data. They used a new capability, the NASA Earth Exchange (NEX),
built for the NASA Advanced Supercomputer facility at the agency's Ames
Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. NEX is a collaborative supercomputing
environment that brings together data, models and computing resources.
With NEX, the study's authors quickly obtained a large-scale view of the impact
of the drought on the Amazon forests and were able to complete the analysis by
January 2011. Similar reports about the impact of the 2005 drought were
published about two years after the fact.
"Timely monitoring of our planet's vegetation with satellites is critical,
and with NEX it can be done efficiently to deliver near-real time information,
as this study demonstrates," said study co-author Ramakrishna Nemani, a
research scientist at Ames. An article about the NEX project appears in this
week's issue of Eos, the weekly newspaper of the American Geophysical Union.
In a TEDx WWF session held in Geneva, Switzerland, Stuart Orr talked about water which is a solvable crisis. Stuart Orr is freshwater programme director for WWF International.