ACCORDING to the text
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First-ever study of all Amazon greenhouse gases
suggest the forest is worsening climate change
The Amazon rainforest is most likely now a net contributor to warming of the planet, according to a first-of-its-kind analysis from more than 30 scientists. For years, researchers have expressed concern that rising temperatures, drought, and deforestation are reducing the capacity of the world’s largest rainforest to absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and help offset emissions from fossil-fuel burning. Recent studies have even suggested that some portions of the tropical landscape already may release more carbon than they store.
But the inhaling and exhaling of CO2 is just one way this damp jungle, the most species-rich on Earth, influences the global climate. Activities in the Amazon, both natural and human-caused, can shift the rainforest’s contribution in significant ways, warming the air directly or releasing other greenhouse gases that do.
Drying wetlands and soil compaction from logging, for example, can increase emissions of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide. Land-clearing fires release black carbon, small particles of soot that absorb sunlight and increase warmth. Deforestation can alter rainfall patterns, further drying and heating the forest. Regular flooding and dam-building releases the potent gas methane, as does cattle ranching, one chief reason forests are destroyed. And roughly 3.5 percent of all methane released globally comes naturally from the Amazon’s trees.
Yet no team had ever tried to assess the cumulative impact of these processes, even as the region is being rapidly transformed. The research, supported by the National Geographic Society an published today in Frontiers in Forests and Global Change, estimates that atmospheric warming from all of these sources combined now appears to swamp the forest’s natural cooling effect.
“Cutting the forest is interfering with its carbon uptake; that’s a problem,” says lead author Kristofer Covey, a professor of environmental studies at New York’s Skidmore College. “But when you start to look at these other factors alongside CO2, it gets really hard to see how the net effect isn’t that the Amazon as a whole is really warming global climate.”
The damage can still be reversed, he and his colleagues say. Stopping global emissions from coal, oil, and natural gas would help restore balance, but curbing Amazon deforestation is a must, along with reducing dam building and increasing efforts to replant trees. Continuing to clear land at current rates appears certain to make warming worse for the entire world.
A recent analysis by Lovejoy and Carlos Nobre, a climate scientist with the University of São Paulo’s Institute for Advanced Studies, suggests that rising deforestation might so alter the flow of that moisture that it could push large stretches of the Amazon toward a permanent transition to a drier woodland savanna. The duo believes that tipping point could be reached if as little as 20 to 25 percent of the rainforest is cleared.
That would spell big trouble for the climate, substantially reducing even more the forests’ potential to scrub the skies of some of our fossil-fuel emissions. By the Brazilian government’s own measure, forest clearing already tops 17 percent.
Source: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/
article/amazon-rainforest-now-appears-to-be-contributing-to-climate-change
UNIOESTE 2021 - QUESTÃO 01
ACCORDING to the text
a) scientists affirm that rising temperatures, drought, and deforestation do not influence the absorption of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
b) scientists discovered that the Amazon Rainforest is the only responsible to raise CO2 emissions.
c) scientists and National Geographic estimate that different factors, such as: rising temperatures, drought, and deforestation, affect the Amazon Rainforest CO2 emissions and the atmospheric warming.
d) the scientists Lovejoy and Carlos Nobre suggest that deforestation is interfering with the Amazon Rainforest carbon absorption and making warming worse forthe entire world.
e) one of the studies points to the fact that the damage cannot be reversed, even if global emissions from coal, oil, and natural gas stop.
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GABARITO:
c) scientists and National Geographic estimate that different factors, such as: rising temperatures, drought, and deforestation, affect the Amazon Rainforest CO2 emissions and the atmospheric warming.
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