Artículos de revistas
Drought sensitivity of the amazon rainforest
Autor
Phillips, Oliver L.
Aragão, Luiz E. O. C.
Lewis, Simon L.
Fisher, Joshua B.
Lloyd, Jon
López González, Gabriela
Malhi, Yadvinder
Monteagudo, Abel
Peacock, Julie
Quesada, Carlos A.
Van der Heijden, Geertje
Almeida, Samuel
Amaral, Iêda
Arroyo, Luzmila
Aymard, Gerardo
Baker, Tim R.
Bánki, Olaf
Blanc, Lilian
Bonal, Damien
Brando, Paulo
Chave, Jerome
Alves de Oliveira, Átila Cristina
Dávila Cardozo, Nallaret
Czimczik, Claudia I.
Feldpausch, Ted R.
Freitas, Maria Aparecida
Gloor, Emanuel
Higuchi, Niro
Jiménez, Eliana
Lloyd, Gareth
Meir, Patrick
Mendoza, Casimiro
Morel, Alexandra
Neill, David A.
Nepstad, Daniel
Patiño, Sandra
Peñuela, Maria Cristina
Prieto, Adriana
Ramírez, Freddy
Schwarz, Michael
Silva, Javier
Silveira, Marcos
Sota Thomas, Anne
Steege, Hans ter
Stropp, Juliana
Vásquez, Rodolfo
Zelazowski, Przemyslaw
Alvarez Dávila, Esteban
Andelman, Sandy
Andrade, Ana
Chao, Kuo-Jung
Erwin, Terry
Di Fiore, Anthony
Honorio C., Eurídice
Keeling, Helen
Killeen, Tim J.
Laurance, William F.
Peña Cruz, Antonio
Pitman, Nigel C. A.
Núñez Vargas, Percy
Ramírez Angulo, Hirma C.
Rudas, Agustín
Salamão, Rafael
Silva, Natalino
Terborgh, John
Torres Lezama, Armando
Institución
Resumen
1343-1347 o.phillips@leeds.ac.uk rhirma@ula.ve torres@ula.ve Amazon forests are a key but poorly understood component of the global carbon cycle. If, as anticipated, they dry this
century, they might accelerate climate change through carbon losses and changed surface energy balances. We used records from multiple long-term monitoring plots across Amazonia to assess forest responses to the intense 2005 drought, a possible analog of future events. Affected forest lost biomass, reversing a large long-term carbon sink, with the greatest impacts observed where the dry season was unusually intense. Relative to pre-2005 conditions, forest subjected to a 100-millimeter increase in water deficit lost 5.3 megagrams of aboveground biomass of carbon per hectare. The drought had a total biomass carbon impact of 1.2 to 1.6 petagrams (1.2 × 1015 to 1.6 × 1015 grams). Amazon forests therefore appear vulnerable to
increasing moisture stress, with the potential for large carbon losses to exert feedback on climate change.