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Disentangling the contribution of multiple land covers to fire‐mediated carbon emissions in Amazonia during the 2010 drought

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Disentangling the contribution of multiple land covers to fire‐mediated carbon emissions in Amazonia during the 2010 drought. / Anderson, Liana; Aragão, Luiz; Gloor, Emanuel et al.
In: Global Biogeochemical Cycles, Vol. 29, No. 10, 22.10.2015, p. 1739-1753.

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Anderson L, Aragão L, Gloor E, Saatchi S, Malhi Y, Barlow BJ et al. Disentangling the contribution of multiple land covers to fire‐mediated carbon emissions in Amazonia during the 2010 drought. Global Biogeochemical Cycles. 2015 Oct 22;29(10):1739-1753. Epub 2015 Sept 8. doi: 10.1002/2014GB005008

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Anderson, Liana ; Aragão, Luiz ; Gloor, Emanuel et al. / Disentangling the contribution of multiple land covers to fire‐mediated carbon emissions in Amazonia during the 2010 drought. In: Global Biogeochemical Cycles. 2015 ; Vol. 29, No. 10. pp. 1739-1753.

Bibtex

@article{7437d8607b6d4f8ab64e25b6bb8525e2,
title = "Disentangling the contribution of multiple land covers to fire‐mediated carbon emissions in Amazonia during the 2010 drought",
abstract = "In less than 15 years, the Amazon region experienced three major droughts. Links between droughts and fires have been demonstrated for the 1997/1998, 2005, and 2010 droughts. In 2010, emissions of 510 ± 120 Tg C were associated to fire alone in Amazonia. Existing approaches have, however, not yet disentangled the proportional contribution of multiple land cover sources to this total. We develop a novel integration of multisensor and multitemporal satellite-derived data on land cover, active fires, and burned area and an empirical model of fire-induced biomass loss to quantify the extent of burned areas and resulting biomass loss for multiple land covers in Mato Grosso (MT) state, southern Amazonia—the 2010 drought most impacted region. We show that 10.77% (96,855 km2) of MT burned. We estimated a gross carbon emission of 56.21 ± 22.5 Tg C from direct combustion of biomass, with an additional 29.4 ± 10 Tg C committed to be emitted in the following years due to dead wood decay. It is estimated that old-growth forest fires in the whole Brazilian Legal Amazon (BLA) have contributed to 14.81 Tg of C (11.75 Tg C to 17.87 Tg C) emissions to the atmosphere during the 2010 fire season, with an affected area of 27,555 km2. Total C loss from the 2010 fires in MT state and old-growth forest fires in the BLA represent, respectively, 77% (47% to 107%) and 86% (68.2% to 103%) of Brazil's National Plan on Climate Change annual target for Amazonia C emission reductions from deforestation.",
author = "Liana Anderson and Luiz Arag{\~a}o and Emanuel Gloor and Sassan Saatchi and Yadvinder Malhi and Barlow, {Bernard Josiah} and {De Berenguer Cesar}, Erika",
note = "{\textcopyright}2015. The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.",
year = "2015",
month = oct,
day = "22",
doi = "10.1002/2014GB005008",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "1739--1753",
journal = "Global Biogeochemical Cycles",
issn = "0886-6236",
publisher = "AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Disentangling the contribution of multiple land covers to fire‐mediated carbon emissions in Amazonia during the 2010 drought

AU - Anderson, Liana

AU - Aragão, Luiz

AU - Gloor, Emanuel

AU - Saatchi, Sassan

AU - Malhi, Yadvinder

AU - Barlow, Bernard Josiah

AU - De Berenguer Cesar, Erika

N1 - ©2015. The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

PY - 2015/10/22

Y1 - 2015/10/22

N2 - In less than 15 years, the Amazon region experienced three major droughts. Links between droughts and fires have been demonstrated for the 1997/1998, 2005, and 2010 droughts. In 2010, emissions of 510 ± 120 Tg C were associated to fire alone in Amazonia. Existing approaches have, however, not yet disentangled the proportional contribution of multiple land cover sources to this total. We develop a novel integration of multisensor and multitemporal satellite-derived data on land cover, active fires, and burned area and an empirical model of fire-induced biomass loss to quantify the extent of burned areas and resulting biomass loss for multiple land covers in Mato Grosso (MT) state, southern Amazonia—the 2010 drought most impacted region. We show that 10.77% (96,855 km2) of MT burned. We estimated a gross carbon emission of 56.21 ± 22.5 Tg C from direct combustion of biomass, with an additional 29.4 ± 10 Tg C committed to be emitted in the following years due to dead wood decay. It is estimated that old-growth forest fires in the whole Brazilian Legal Amazon (BLA) have contributed to 14.81 Tg of C (11.75 Tg C to 17.87 Tg C) emissions to the atmosphere during the 2010 fire season, with an affected area of 27,555 km2. Total C loss from the 2010 fires in MT state and old-growth forest fires in the BLA represent, respectively, 77% (47% to 107%) and 86% (68.2% to 103%) of Brazil's National Plan on Climate Change annual target for Amazonia C emission reductions from deforestation.

AB - In less than 15 years, the Amazon region experienced three major droughts. Links between droughts and fires have been demonstrated for the 1997/1998, 2005, and 2010 droughts. In 2010, emissions of 510 ± 120 Tg C were associated to fire alone in Amazonia. Existing approaches have, however, not yet disentangled the proportional contribution of multiple land cover sources to this total. We develop a novel integration of multisensor and multitemporal satellite-derived data on land cover, active fires, and burned area and an empirical model of fire-induced biomass loss to quantify the extent of burned areas and resulting biomass loss for multiple land covers in Mato Grosso (MT) state, southern Amazonia—the 2010 drought most impacted region. We show that 10.77% (96,855 km2) of MT burned. We estimated a gross carbon emission of 56.21 ± 22.5 Tg C from direct combustion of biomass, with an additional 29.4 ± 10 Tg C committed to be emitted in the following years due to dead wood decay. It is estimated that old-growth forest fires in the whole Brazilian Legal Amazon (BLA) have contributed to 14.81 Tg of C (11.75 Tg C to 17.87 Tg C) emissions to the atmosphere during the 2010 fire season, with an affected area of 27,555 km2. Total C loss from the 2010 fires in MT state and old-growth forest fires in the BLA represent, respectively, 77% (47% to 107%) and 86% (68.2% to 103%) of Brazil's National Plan on Climate Change annual target for Amazonia C emission reductions from deforestation.

U2 - 10.1002/2014GB005008

DO - 10.1002/2014GB005008

M3 - Journal article

VL - 29

SP - 1739

EP - 1753

JO - Global Biogeochemical Cycles

JF - Global Biogeochemical Cycles

SN - 0886-6236

IS - 10

ER -