4.8 Article

Deforestation-induced warming over tropical mountain regions regulated by elevation

期刊

NATURE GEOSCIENCE
卷 14, 期 1, 页码 23-+

出版社

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41561-020-00666-0

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资金

  1. Lamsam-Thailand Sustain Development [B0891]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42071022, 42001321]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M672693]
  4. Southern University of Science and Technology [29/Y01296122]
  5. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA20060401]
  6. European Research Council Synergy project [SyG-2013-610028 IMBALANCE-P]
  7. ANR CLAND Convergence Institute
  8. Swedish BECC
  9. Swedish MERGE

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Deforestation in tropical mountain regions causes elevation-dependent warming, with the impact varying depending on altitude's role in albedo and evapotranspiration. The warming effect of deforestation decreases with higher elevation, affecting crop yields, land degradation, and nearby ecosystems, suggesting the need for future assessments to incorporate these additional impacts.
Agriculture is expanding in tropical mountainous areas, yet its climatic effect is poorly understood. Here, we investigate how elevation regulates the biophysical climate impacts of deforestation over tropical mountainous areas by integrating satellite-observed forest cover changes into a high-resolution land-atmosphere coupled model. We show that recent forest conversion between 2000 and 2014 increased the regional warming by 0.022 +/- 0.002 degrees C in the Southeast Asian Massif, 0.010 +/- 0.007 degrees C in the Barisan Mountains (Maritime Southeast Asia), 0.042 +/- 0.010 degrees C in the Serra da Espinhaco (South America) and 0.047 +/- 0.008 degrees C in the Albertine Rift mountains (Africa) during the local dry season. The deforestation-driven local temperature anomaly can reach up to 2 degrees C where forest conversion is extensive. The warming from mountain deforestation depends on elevation, through the intertwined and opposing effects of increased albedo causing cooling and decreased evapotranspiration causing warming. As the elevation increases, the albedo effect increases in importance and the warming effect decreases, analogous to previously highlighted decreases of deforestation-induced warming with increasing latitude. As most new croplands are encroaching lands at low to moderate elevations, deforestation produces higher warming from suppressed evapotranspiration. Impacts of this additional warming on crop yields, land degradation and biodiversity of nearby intact ecosystems should be incorporated into future assessments. Deforestation causes elevation-dependent warming over tropical mountain regions, according to high-resolution climate simulations.

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