Deforestation Induced Climate Change: Effects of Spatial Scale.

Deforestation is associated with increased atmospheric CO2 and alterations to the surface energy and mass balances that can lead to local and global climate changes. Previous modelling studies show that the global surface air temperature (SAT) response to deforestation depends on latitude, with most...

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Main Authors: Patrick Longobardi, Alvaro Montenegro, Hugo Beltrami, Michael Eby
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4839769?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-0b18c2cbf15644f885dad999cb5e8d762020-11-24T21:32:50ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01114e015335710.1371/journal.pone.0153357Deforestation Induced Climate Change: Effects of Spatial Scale.Patrick LongobardiAlvaro MontenegroHugo BeltramiMichael EbyDeforestation is associated with increased atmospheric CO2 and alterations to the surface energy and mass balances that can lead to local and global climate changes. Previous modelling studies show that the global surface air temperature (SAT) response to deforestation depends on latitude, with most simulations showing that high latitude deforestation results in cooling, low latitude deforestation causes warming and that the mid latitude response is mixed. These earlier conclusions are based on simulated large scal land cover change, with complete removal of trees from whole latitude bands. Using a global climate model we examine the effects of removing fractions of 5% to 100% of forested areas in the high, mid and low latitudes. All high latitude deforestation scenarios reduce mean global SAT, the opposite occurring for low latitude deforestation, although a decrease in SAT is simulated over low latitude deforested areas. Mid latitude SAT response is mixed. In all simulations deforested areas tend to become drier and have lower SAT, although soil temperatures increase over deforested mid and low latitude grid cells. For high latitude deforestation fractions of 45% and above, larger net primary productivity, in conjunction with colder and drier conditions after deforestation cause an increase in soil carbon large enough to produce a net decrease of atmospheric CO2. Our results reveal the complex interactions between soil carbon dynamics and other climate subsystems in the energy partition responses to land cover change.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4839769?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Longobardi
Alvaro Montenegro
Hugo Beltrami
Michael Eby
spellingShingle Patrick Longobardi
Alvaro Montenegro
Hugo Beltrami
Michael Eby
Deforestation Induced Climate Change: Effects of Spatial Scale.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Patrick Longobardi
Alvaro Montenegro
Hugo Beltrami
Michael Eby
author_sort Patrick Longobardi
title Deforestation Induced Climate Change: Effects of Spatial Scale.
title_short Deforestation Induced Climate Change: Effects of Spatial Scale.
title_full Deforestation Induced Climate Change: Effects of Spatial Scale.
title_fullStr Deforestation Induced Climate Change: Effects of Spatial Scale.
title_full_unstemmed Deforestation Induced Climate Change: Effects of Spatial Scale.
title_sort deforestation induced climate change: effects of spatial scale.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Deforestation is associated with increased atmospheric CO2 and alterations to the surface energy and mass balances that can lead to local and global climate changes. Previous modelling studies show that the global surface air temperature (SAT) response to deforestation depends on latitude, with most simulations showing that high latitude deforestation results in cooling, low latitude deforestation causes warming and that the mid latitude response is mixed. These earlier conclusions are based on simulated large scal land cover change, with complete removal of trees from whole latitude bands. Using a global climate model we examine the effects of removing fractions of 5% to 100% of forested areas in the high, mid and low latitudes. All high latitude deforestation scenarios reduce mean global SAT, the opposite occurring for low latitude deforestation, although a decrease in SAT is simulated over low latitude deforested areas. Mid latitude SAT response is mixed. In all simulations deforested areas tend to become drier and have lower SAT, although soil temperatures increase over deforested mid and low latitude grid cells. For high latitude deforestation fractions of 45% and above, larger net primary productivity, in conjunction with colder and drier conditions after deforestation cause an increase in soil carbon large enough to produce a net decrease of atmospheric CO2. Our results reveal the complex interactions between soil carbon dynamics and other climate subsystems in the energy partition responses to land cover change.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4839769?pdf=render
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