December 21, 2020

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Brazilian forests found to be transitioning from carbon sinks to carbon sources

Semideciduous forests in Brazil. Credit: Vinícius Maia
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Semideciduous forests in Brazil. Credit: Vinícius Maia

A team of researchers affiliated with several institutions in Brazil has found that some non-Amazonian forests in Brazil have already begun to transition from carbon sinks to carbon sources. In their paper published in the journal Science Advances, the group describes their 33-year study of deciduous, semi-deciduous and evergreen forests in Brazil's state of Minas Gerais.

As the researchers note, for several years, have been predicting that some of the forest area in Brazil would soon transition from carbon sinks to carbon sources—including the rain forests. They have noted that as temperatures in the area have risen, and as humans have continued to burn forests, the amount of carbon released by forests in some parts of the world, such as Minas Gerais, would begin releasing more carbon than was being sequestered by natural tree growth. To find out if this might be the case for 32 forests in Minas Gerais, located in southeastern Brazil, the researchers began measuring carbon dioxide sequestering and emittance back in 1987. They continued monitoring and measuring the up through 2020.

In looking at their data, the researchers found that forests in the studied region (which covered 33 hectares of land) were sequestering approximately 2.6% less carbon per year in 2020 than they were back in 1987. And during that same , the area released approximately 3.4% more carbon dioxide. In looking at total amounts being sequestered versus emitted, they found that the region now emits more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than is sequestered—changing it from a carbon sink to a carbon source. The data also showed that the region experienced a tipping point back in 2013.

Evergreen forest in Brazil. Credit: Rubens Santos
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Evergreen forest in Brazil. Credit: Rubens Santos
Semideciduous forests in Brazil. Credit: Rubens Santos
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Semideciduous forests in Brazil. Credit: Rubens Santos

The researchers suggest that the problem is not unsolvable—even with a warming planet, it would be possible for the region to transition back to a carbon sink if land management changes were made. They suggest the Brazilian government ban forest burning and promote forest planting. They note also that efforts to reverse global warming by reducing global emissions could help, as well. They also point out that failure to make changes will likely mean that more forested areas in Brazil (and other parts of the world) will transition from to carbon sources—including rainforests in the Amazon river basin.

More information: "The carbon sink of tropical seasonal forests in southeastern Brazil can be under threat," Science Advances (2020). advances.sciencemag.org/lookup … .1126/sciadv.abd4548

Journal information: Science Advances

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