Tropical forests and the global carbon cycle: impacts of atmospheric carbon dioxide, climate change and rate of deforestation

Author:

Cramer Wolfgang12,Bondeau Alberte1,Schaphoff Sibyll1,Lucht Wolfgang1,Smith Benjamin3,Sitch Stephen1

Affiliation:

1. Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Department of Global Change and Natural Systems, PO Box 60 12 03, D-14412 Potsdam, Germany

2. Institute of Geoecology, Potsdam University, PO Box 60 15 53, D-14415 Potsdam, Germany

3. Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystems Analysis, University of Lund, Sölvegatan 12, S–22362 Lund, Sweden

Abstract

The remaining carbon stocks in wet tropical forests are currently at risk because of anthropogenic deforestation, but also because of the possibility of release driven by climate change. To identify the relative roles of CO 2 increase, changing temperature and rainfall, and deforestation in the future, and the magnitude of their impact on atmospheric CO 2 concentrations, we have applied a dynamic global vegetation model, using multiple scenarios of tropical deforestation (extrapolated from two estimates of current rates) and multiple scenarios of changing climate (derived from four independent offline general circulation model simulations). Results show that deforestation will probably produce large losses of carbon, despite the uncertainty about the deforestation rates. Some climate models produce additional large fluxes due to increased drought stress caused by rising temperature and decreasing rainfall. One climate model, however, produces an additional carbon sink. Taken together, our estimates of additional carbon emissions during the twenty–first century, for all climate and deforestation scenarios, range from 101 to 367 Gt C, resulting in CO 2 concentration increases above background values between 29 and 129 p.p.m. An evaluation of the method indicates that better estimates of tropical carbon sources and sinks require improved assessments of current and future deforestation, and more consistent precipitation scenarios from climate models. Notwithstanding the uncertainties, continued tropical deforestation will most certainly play a very large role in the build–up of future greenhouse gas concentrations.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference35 articles.

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