4.7 Article

Climate change and deforestation increase the vulnerability of Amazonian forests to post-fire grass invasion

Journal

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 30, Issue 12, Pages 2368-2381

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/geb.13388

Keywords

Amazon; climate change; grass-fire cycle; grass invasion; regime shifts; savanna-forest boundaries; tipping points

Funding

  1. European Research Council project Earth Resilience in the Anthropocene [743080]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) [743080] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The study aimed to evaluate vulnerability of the Amazon forest to post-fire grass invasion under present and future climate scenarios. Research showed that 14% of the Amazon is vulnerable to post-fire grass invasion under current climate conditions, with the south-eastern region at highest risk. It was found that by the end of the century, 21% of the Amazon could be vulnerable to post-fire grass invasion under unmitigated climate change, with 3% already at high risk of irreversible shifts to a grassy state due to fire frequency and intensity.
Aim We aimed to evaluate the vulnerability of the Amazon forest to post-fire grass invasion under present and future climate scenarios. Location Amazon Basin. Time period 1981-2017 and 2070-2099. Major taxa studied Plants. Methods We combined a fire-ecosystem model with remote sensing data and empirically-derived equations to evaluate the effects of a high-intensity fire (i.e., during an extreme drought) and logging in forest edges on tree canopy, and exotic grass cover under present and unmitigated climate change scenarios. We also contrasted simulated vegetation recovery time (as a function of climate variability) and current fire return intervals to identify areas in which fire-grass feedbacks could lock the system in a grass-dominated state. Results Under current climatic conditions, 14% of the Amazon was found to be vulnerable to post-fire grass invasion, with the south-eastern Amazon at the highest risk of invasion. We found that under unmitigated climate change, by the end of the century, 21% of the Amazon would be vulnerable to post-fire grass invasion. In 3% of the Amazon, fire return intervals are already shorter than the time required for grass exclusion by canopy recovery, implying a high risk of irreversible shifts to a fire-maintained degraded forest grassy state. The south-eastern region of the Amazon is currently at highest risk of irreversible degradation. Main conclusions Although resilience is evident in areas with low fire activity, increased fire frequency and intensity could push large Amazon forest areas towards a tipping point, causing transitions to states with low tree and high grass cover.

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