Deforestation offsets water balance changes due to climate variability in the Xingu River in eastern Amazonia

16 de fevereiro de 2015

fev 16, 2015

Prajjwal K. Panday, Michael T. Coe, Marcia N. Macedo, Paul Lefebvre, Andrea D. de Almeida Castanho

Deforestation reduced forest cover in Brazil’s Xingu River Basin (XB; area: 510,000 km2) from 90% of the basin in the 1970s to 75% in the 2000s. Such large-scale land cover changes can substantially alter regional water budgets, but their influence can be difficult to isolate from that of natural climate variability. In this study, we estimate changes to the XB water balance from the 1970s to the 2000s due to climate variations and deforestation, using a combination of long-term observations of rainfall and discharge; satellite-based estimates of evapotranspiration (MODIS) and surface water storage (GRACE); and numerical modeling estimates (IBIS) of water budget components (evapotranspiration, soil moisture, and discharge). Model simulations over this period suggest that climate variations alone accounted for a −82 mm decrease (mean per unit area) in annual discharge (−14%, from 8190 m3 s−1 to 7806 m3 s−1), due to a −2% decrease in precipitation and +3% increase in evapotranspiration. Deforestation alone caused a +34 mm increase in annual discharge (+6%), as a result of a −3% decrease in evapotranspiration and +1% increase in soil moisture across the XB. Climate variability and land cover change thus had opposite effects on the XB water balance, with climate effects masking deforestation-induced changes to the water budget. Protected areas, which cover 55% of the basin, have helped to mitigate the effects of past deforestation on water recycling in the Xingu. However, our results suggest that continued deforestation outside protected areas could trigger changes of sufficient magnitude to offset climate variability.

Leia o artigo completo.

Read the full article.

Baixar (sujeito à disponibilidade)

Download (subject to availability)

ODS 15

Este projeto está alinhado aos Objetivos de Desenvolvimento Sustentável (ODS).

Saiba mais em brasil.un.org/pt-br/sdgs.

Veja também

See also

Moratória da soja: 4º ano do mapeamento e monitoramento do plantio de soja no bioma Amazônia

Moratória da soja: 4º ano do mapeamento e monitoramento do plantio de soja no bioma Amazônia

Com base em dados do Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE), relatório mostra que no quarto ano da Moratória da Soja, correspondente à safra de 2010-2011, a oleaginosa foi identificada em 11.698 hectares (ha) de áreas desmatadas na Amazônia após 2006. O número revela aumento em relação à safra anterior (2009/2010), quando foram mapeados 6.295 ha.

Tanguro Project – Report

Tanguro Project – Report

The Tanguro Project has begun in 2004 focusing on the development of innovative techniques for the recovery of degraded areas at the agricultural frontier. Since then, the goals have expanded. The interdisciplinary group of researchers is currently studying the processes that affect an ecosystem in order to outline an agricultural production model that is balanced with conservation of the Amazon and Cerrado.