Report: Severe droughts in Amazon linked to climate change
source: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2013-025&cid=release_2013-025
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- JanforGore
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http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2013-025&cid=release_20...
An area of the Amazon rainforest twice the size of California continues to suffer from the effects of a megadrought that began in 2005, finds a new NASA-led study. These results, together with observed recurrences of droughts every few years and associated damage to the forests in southern and western Amazonia in the past decade, suggest these rainforests may be showing the first signs of potential large-scale degradation due to climate change.An international research team led by Sassan Saatchi of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., analyzed more than a decade of satellite microwave radar data collected between 2000 and 2009 over Amazonia. The observations included measurements of rainfall from NASA's Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission and measurements of the moisture content and structure of the forest canopy (top layer) from the Seawinds scatterometer on NASA's QuikScat spacecraft.
The scientists found that during the summer of 2005, more than 270,000 square miles (700,000 square kilometers, or 70 million hectares) of pristine, old-growth forest in southwestern Amazonia experienced an extensive, severe drought. This megadrought caused widespread changes to the forest canopy that were detectable by satellite. The changes suggest dieback of branches and tree falls, especially among the older, larger, more vulnerable canopy trees that blanket the forest.
While rainfall levels gradually recovered in subsequent years, the damage to the forest canopy persisted all the way to the next major drought, which began in 2010. About half the forest affected by the 2005 drought - an area the size of California - did not recover by the time QuikScat stopped gathering global data in November 2009 and before the start of a more extensive drought in 2010.
"The biggest surprise for us was that the effects appeared to persist for years after the 2005 drought," said study co-author Yadvinder Malhi of the University of Oxford, United Kingdom. "We had expected the forest canopy to bounce back after a year with a new flush of leaf growth, but the damage appeared to persist right up to the subsequent drought in 2010."
Recent Amazonian droughts have drawn attention to the vulnerability of tropical forests to climate change. Satellite and ground data have shown an increase in wildfires during drought years and tree die-offs following severe droughts. Until now, there had been no satellite-based assessment of the multi-year impacts of these droughts across all of Amazonia. Large-scale droughts can lead to sustained releases of carbon dioxide from decaying wood, affecting ecosystems and Earth's carbon cycle.
The researchers attribute the 2005 Amazonian drought to the long-term warming of tropical Atlantic sea surface temperatures. "In effect, the same climate phenomenon that helped form hurricanes Katrina and Rita along U.S. southern coasts in 2005 also likely caused the severe drought in southwest Amazonia," Saatchi said. "An extreme climate event caused the drought, which subsequently damaged the Amazonian trees."
Saatchi said such megadroughts can have long-lasting effects on rainforest ecosystems. "Our results suggest that if droughts continue at five- to 10-year intervals or increase in frequency due to climate change, large areas of the Amazon forest are likely to be exposed to persistent effects of droughts and corresponding slow forest recovery," he said. "This may alter the structure and function of Amazonian rainforest ecosystems."
The team found that the area affected by the 2005 drought was much larger than scientists had previously predicted. About 30 percent (656,370 square miles, or 1.7 million square kilometers) of the Amazon basin's total current forest area was affected, with more than five percent of the forest experiencing severe drought conditions. The 2010 drought affected nearly half of the entire Amazon forest, with nearly a fifth of it experiencing severe drought. More than 231,660 square miles (600,000 square kilometers) of the area affected by the 2005 drought were also affected by the 2010 drought. This "double whammy" by successive droughts suggests a potentially long-lasting and widespread effect on forests in southern and western Amazonia.
The drought rate in Amazonia during the past decade is unprecedented over the past century.
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JanforGore
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We can continue to concentrate on things beyond our control, or we can actually join together and do something about what we can control.
Bears repeating.
- 4 months ago
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JanforGore
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YourTaxes_MyPaycheck
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JanforGore:
You're beating a poor old dead horse ya know. Time has expired on our Leases. People have become addicted to heatpumps too. Air conditioning causes people to develop a crippled metabolic rate a one speed heart.
Like happened to the Jim guy who ran marathons so many years ago. He had a heart issue anyway but he always trained at one certain speed. So when he ran across the finish line his heart didn't know how to slow down. He died at 41YO or something.
People today if they turn off their heatpump-steady temperature controls, and turned off their car AC's, they would die too. Otherwise I would suggest turning them off INSTANT SOLVED PROBLEM to a large extent. Reduced fossil fuel power plant exhausts.
But it can't be done. So cars will have to continue being made having 30% "un-needed" horsepower to cover the AC requirements. Many people can't walk up a flight of stands for poor health, and that from poor food, so you have to fix the poor food first for them to fix their poor health before you can ever stand a chance for them to use less electricity.
It's a Catch-22 5 ways to 2050. That's another REASON why the U.S. fuel consumption is much higher than AFRICA too. It took 5+ decades to get people this way it will take 5+ decades to reverse it.
So perhaps by 2070.
And that's for Americans ON THE WAY DOWN THE FUEL LADDER. While Americans with lots of help could wean themselves off the fuel boobs over at Shell Oil and so on the rest of the world DESPERATELY CLIMBING THE SAME LADDER are demanding they get a turn at the magic ring we had our time suckling at.
Their 10,000 will easily overtake & demolish our 10 men. On any ball court. So unfortunately as it sounds to you whew you can fight City Hall a whole lot more successively than the REST OF THE WORLD JUST NOW GETTING WINDOW UNIT AIR CONDITIONERS AND AIR CONDITIONED CARS.
Why don't you do something productive, knit a sweater for the massive cold front descending on you in 2 more days hmm? Don't you think that would be smarter? Set this aside for two days. It will be here when you get back. Trust me.
- 4 months ago
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YourTaxes_MyPaycheck
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YourTaxes_MyPaycheck
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JanforGore:
UNLESS of course all those other countries bypassed these carbon burners we call US automobiles and leapfrog ahead. I would like to see that because right now my FOOD STAMPS ARE IN DANGER.
PULL BACK ON THE STICK WE GONNA CRASH BEHIND TIMECOP.
- 4 months ago
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YourTaxes_MyPaycheck
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csmonut
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I have been noticing that mainstream media is beginning to report about cliimate changes and the ramifications.
Perhaps this will help make people who were on the fence, or he deniers, begin to think....at least if they begin to think instead of parrot what they heard from a talking head, it will be a start. - 4 months ago
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csmonut
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JanforGore
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csmonut:
Well we can't wait for them to "come around." Although It is good to see more news networks covering this.... kind of hard not to at this point.
- 4 months ago
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JanforGore
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YourTaxes_MyPaycheck
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Once the growth dies the soil is being blasted with full-strength solar rays. It is not a naturally-recoverable situation INTERVENTION IS NECESSARY.
If Miracle Gro could be mixed into a white-colored ^^solar-reflective^^ foam and spread over the soil the entire breaking down process could be immediately halted, reversed and new growth fostered. Soon as the baby seedlings and grasses sprout also added in the light reflecting Miracle Gro foam the new blanket of GREENERY would once again be using the sunlight up.
SOLVED THAT!!! NOW GIVE ME MORE DEM FOOD STAMPS!!!
- 4 months ago
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YourTaxes_MyPaycheck
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artemis6
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I do get overwhelmed , frustrated and saddened by these , possibly preventable changes . We all must do what we can .
- 4 months ago
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artemis6
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northernexpat
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Not a good sign.
- 4 months ago
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northernexpat
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JanforGore
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http://www.livescience.com/26380-megadrought-amazon-rain-forest.html
"When drought hits a forest and kills trees, dead wood releases carbon dioxide as it rots instead of absorbing heat-trapping greenhouse gas from the atmosphere as plants normally do. The study's leader, Sassan Saatchi, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., said that more frequent droughts due to climate change could drag on rainforest ecosystems and the carbon cycle in the long run."
We can continue to concentrate on things beyond our control, or we can actually join together and do something about what we can control.
- 4 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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Northern Brazil experiencing worst drought in decades.
- 4 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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Results of the study were published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
- 4 months ago
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JanforGore
