News Release

Amazon deforestation has a significant impact on the local climate in Brazil

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Leeds

The loss of forest cover in the Amazon has a significant impact on the local climate in Brazil, according to a new study.

The UN Environment Programme has said warned that the Amazon wildfires threaten "...this precious natural resource..." and that the forest helps mitigate the effects of climate change.

Insight into the effects of deforestation in the Amazon - and the way it can intensify climate change, particularly at a local level - has been published open access in the journal Frontiers.

Using satellite data, Jess Baker and Professor Dominick Spracklen from the University of Leeds, evaluated the climatic consequences of deforestation in the Amazon between 2001 and 2013.

They found that deforestation causes the local climate to warm - and that warming intensified as the severity of deforestation increased.

Intact forests in the region, with less than 5% canopy loss, had the most climate stability over the ten years, showing only small increases in temperature.

Areas that had tree cover reduced to below 70% warmed 0.44°C more than neighbouring intact forests during the study period.

The differences between intact and disturbed forests were most pronounced during the driest part of the year, when temperature increases of up to 1.5°C were observed in areas affected by severe deforestation. This increase is additional to global temperature rises driven by climate change.

Study co-author Jess Baker from the School of Earth and Environment at Leeds said: "The Amazon wildfires have reminded us all of the important role that forests play in our global systems. But it cannot be overlooked that intact Amazon forests are also crucially important for Brazil's own local climate.

"A healthy intact Amazon forest helps regulate the local climate and can even act as a buffer to the warming effects of climate change, compared with disturbed forests."

Study co-author Dominick Spracklen, Professor of Biopshere-Atmosphere Interactions at Leeds said: "Deforestation decreases the amount of water emitted to the atmosphere from the forest through a process called evapotranspiration.

"Evapotranspiration can be thought of as the forest 'sweating'; when the moisture emitted by the forests evaporates it cools the local climate. Deforestation reduces evapotranspiration, taking away this cooling function and causing local temperatures to rise.

"As temperatures rise this increases drought stress and makes forests more susceptible to burning."

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Further information:

The paper Climate Benefits of Intact Amazon Forests and the Biophysical Consequences of Disturbance is published 30 August 2019. https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2019.00047

It is part of a special issue on intact forests in Frontiers in Forests and Global Change.

Jess Baker and Dominick Spracklen are available for further comment or interview.

Please contact University of Leeds press officer Anna Harrison +44(0)113 343 4031 or pressoffice@leeds.ac.uk

University of Leeds

The University of Leeds is one of the largest higher education institutions in the UK, with more than 38,000 students from more than 150 different countries, and a member of the Russell Group of research-intensive universities. The University plays a significant role in the Turing, Rosalind Franklin and Royce Institutes.

We are a top ten university for research and impact power in the UK, according to the 2014 Research Excellence Framework, and are in the top 100 of the QS World University Rankings 2020.

The University was awarded a Gold rating by the Government's Teaching Excellence Framework in 2017, recognising its 'consistently outstanding' teaching and learning provision. Twenty-six of our academics have been awarded National Teaching Fellowships - more than any other institution in England, Northern Ireland and Wales - reflecting the excellence of our teaching. http://www.leeds.ac.uk

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