----- forwarded message -----
Date: Wed, 18 Jul 2001 15:49:07 +0200
From: secr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Amazon forest gone in 20 years ?
----- forwarded message -----
Subject: [gaia-l] Amazon forest could disappear, soon
Date: Wed, 18 Jul 2001 07:50:28 -0300
From: Mark Graffis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Science News

Week of July 14, 2001; Vol.  160, No.  2

Sid Perkins

A new computer model that includes a forest's effect on regional climate
shows that the Amazon rain forest could disappear much more rapidly than
previously expected.  Rain forests depend on large amounts of precipitation
to remain lush.  Much of the moisture taken in by a trees' roots returns to
the atmosphere through the leaves in a process called transpiration.  In the
rain forest, this process has a significant effect on local and regional
climates, says James E.  Alcock, an environmental scientist at Pennsylvania
State University's Abington College in Abington. Logging and burning for
agriculture currently claim about 1 percent of the Amazon rain forest per
year.  Alcock says that this large-scale deforestation substantially alters
the rate of transpiration.  After farmers and loggers cut and burn broad
swaths of rain forest, more precipitation runs out of the area via the
rivers.  This leaves less moisture to return to the atmosphere-and that
means, in turn, less rain.  As a result, forest areas that people have
cleared don't grow back as quickly.  Meanwhile, the decrease in precipitation
slowly transforms the remaining stands of trees into a different type of
forest.  Because large-scale deforestation of the Amazon River basin began in
the mid-1970s, a simple calculation that accounts for regrowth predicts
that the rain forest there will last only until 2150 or so.  However, Alcock
says that when mathematical models also include the effects of decreased
transpiration on regional climate, the forest disappears much faster.  Such
an analysis suggests that the Amazon rain forest could disappear sometime
between 2020 and 2030, he notes.

References Alcock, J.E.  2001.  Stable and unstable states in a system
controlled by positive feedback, implications for the tropical rainforest
ecosystem.  Geological Society of America and Geological Society of London
global meeting.  June 24-28.  Edinburgh.
Sources James E.  Alcock Department of Environmental Sciences 
Penn State Abington College 
1600 Woodland Road
Abington, PA 19001


>From Science News, Vol.  160, No.  2, July 14,
2001, p.  24.

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