Amazon rainforest no longer ‘carbon sink’ as it now emits more than it takes in
Parts of the Amazon are now emitting carbon rather than absorbing it, scientists say
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Your support makes all the difference.Parts of the Amazon rainforest may contribute to global warming as it emits more carbon than it absorbs, a new study finds.
Deforestation and “rapid local warming” in a fifth of the Amazon has decreased or eliminated the rainforest’s role as a “carbon sink” – a place that absorbs more carbon than it releases.
Professor Luciana Gatti and her colleagues collected air samples from four regions of the Amazon, roughly twice a month over the span of nine years, to measure the tropical forest’s atmosphere.
The scientists from Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE) analysed the data to determine how carbon dioxide (CO2) and carbon monoxide are concentrated in different parts of the Amazon.
The air samples were compared with those from the south Atlantic Ocean, which has been found to absorb as much as 75 per cent of the excess heat and 40 per cent of human-generated CO2 emissions taken up by the oceans.
The scientists also used the CO2 concentration gradients to estimate how much the carbon emissions increased or decreased in connection to vegetation growth, decay, and forest fires.
Millions of trees have been lost to logging and fires in recent years. There were an unprecedented number of fires in the Amazon in 2019 and 2020, which reduced swathes of the forest to scorched earth.
The INPE scientists’ data reveals that western Amazonia is still a carbon sink, albeit a weak one, due to its almost constantly wet climate and relatively little decay.
Eastern Amazonia’s ability to absorb carbon has been degraded or even reversed, due to deforestation and its increasingly warm and dry climate. The southeastern part of the forest, which makes up 20 per cent of the Amazon, has also reversed its ability to absorb carbon by instead becoming a carbon source, the findings suggest.
The scientists were not able to carry out analyses of all areas of the Amazon, which vary enormously.
![The Amazon’s ability to absorb carbon has reduced drastically over the decades](https://static.the-independent.com/s3fs-public/thumbnails/image/2020/10/05/18/istock-172791804.jpg)
The findings are new, but the researchers told the BBC last year about the implications a reversal of carbon absorption would have on the climate crisis.
Prof Gatti said: “Each year is worse. We observed that this area in the south-east is an important source of carbon. And it doesn’t matter whether it is a wet year or a dry year. 2017-18 was a wet year, but it didn’t make any difference.”
Prof Carlos Nobre, who co-authored Prof Gatti’s study and is a researcher at the University of Sao Paulo’s Institute for Advanced Studies, has called the observation “very worrying” because “it could be showing the beginnings of a major tipping point”.
He believes the new findings suggest that in the next 30 years more than half of the Amazon could transform from rainforest into savannah if it loses its ability to renew itself and begins to emit more carbon than it takes in.
Prof Nobre has said that the Amazon used to absorb 2 billion tonnes of CO2 a year from the atmosphere in the 1980s and 1990s, but that annual amount has now been reduced by about half.
The research has been published in the journal, Nature.
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