Asynchronous carbon sink saturation in African and Amazonian tropical forests

被引:0
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作者
Wannes Hubau
Simon L. Lewis
Oliver L. Phillips
Kofi Affum-Baffoe
Hans Beeckman
Aida Cuní-Sanchez
Armandu K. Daniels
Corneille E. N. Ewango
Sophie Fauset
Jacques M. Mukinzi
Douglas Sheil
Bonaventure Sonké
Martin J. P. Sullivan
Terry C. H. Sunderland
Hermann Taedoumg
Sean C. Thomas
Lee J. T. White
Katharine A. Abernethy
Stephen Adu-Bredu
Christian A. Amani
Timothy R. Baker
Lindsay F. Banin
Fidèle Baya
Serge K. Begne
Amy C. Bennett
Fabrice Benedet
Robert Bitariho
Yannick E. Bocko
Pascal Boeckx
Patrick Boundja
Roel J. W. Brienen
Terry Brncic
Eric Chezeaux
George B. Chuyong
Connie J. Clark
Murray Collins
James A. Comiskey
David A. Coomes
Greta C. Dargie
Thales de Haulleville
Marie Noel Djuikouo Kamdem
Jean-Louis Doucet
Adriane Esquivel-Muelbert
Ted R. Feldpausch
Alusine Fofanah
Ernest G. Foli
Martin Gilpin
Emanuel Gloor
Christelle Gonmadje
Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury
机构
[1] University of Leeds,School of Geography
[2] Royal Museum for Central Africa,Service of Wood Biology
[3] Ghent University,Department of Environment, Laboratory of Wood Technology (Woodlab)
[4] University College London,Department of Geography
[5] Forestry Commission of Ghana,Mensuration Unit
[6] University of York,Department of Environment and Geography
[7] Forestry Development Authority of the Government of Liberia (FDA),DR Congo Programme
[8] Wildlife Conservation Society,Faculté de Gestion de Ressources Naturelles Renouvelables
[9] Centre de Formation et de Recherche en Conservation Forestière (CEFRECOF),School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences
[10] Université de Kisangani,Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resource Management
[11] University of Plymouth,Plant Systematic and Ecology Laboratory, Higher Teachers’ Training College
[12] Salonga National Park,Department of Natural Sciences
[13] World Wide Fund for Nature,Faculty of Forestry
[14] Norwegian University of Life Sciences,Faculty of Forestry
[15] University of Yaounde I,Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences
[16] Manchester Metropolitan University,Forêts et Sociétés (F&S)
[17] Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR),Forêts et Sociétés (F&S)
[18] University of British Columbia,The Institute of Tropical Forest Conservation (ITFC)
[19] Bioversity International,Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Laboratoire de Botanique et Écologie
[20] University of Toronto,Isotope Bioscience Laboratory
[21] Ministry of Forests,ISOFYS
[22] Seas,Congo Programme
[23] Environment and Climate,Faculty of Science, Department of Botany and Plant Physiology
[24] Institut de Recherche en Écologie Tropicale,Nicholas School of the Environment
[25] University of Stirling,School of GeoSciences
[26] Forestry Research Institute of Ghana (FORIG),Inventory and Monitoring Program
[27] Université Officielle de Bukavu,Department of Plant Sciences
[28] UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology,TERRA, Forest is Life, Gembloux Agro
[29] Ministère des Eaux,Bio Tech
[30] Forêts,School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences
[31] Chasse et Pêche (MEFCP),Department of Geography, College of Life and Environmental Sciences
[32] Institut Centrafricain de Recherche Agronomique (ICRA),Forest Global Earth Observatory (ForestGEO)
[33] Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (CIRAD),Kunming Institute of Botany
[34] Université de Montpellier,Division of Vertebrate Zoology
[35] Mbarara University of Science and Technology (MUST),Département Hommes et Environnement
[36] Université Marien Ngouabi,École Normale Supérieure (ENS), Département des Sciences et Vie de la Terre, Laboratoire de Géomatique et d’Écologie Tropicale Appliquée
[37] Ghent University,School of Biological Sciences
[38] Wildlife Conservation Society,Department of Environment, Laboratory of Computational & Applied Vegetation Ecology (Cavelab)
[39] Rougier-Gabon,Department of Earth Sciences
[40] University of Buea,Centre for Conservation Science
[41] Duke University,Faculté des Sciences, Laboratoire d’Écologie et Aménagement Forestier
[42] University of Edinburgh,Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment
[43] Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment,Tropical Forests and People Research Centre
[44] National Park Service,School of Biological Sciences
[45] Smithsonian Institution,Department of Zoology, Conservation Science Group
[46] University of Cambridge,School of Life Sciences
[47] University of Liège,Department of Biology
[48] University of Birmingham,Department of Plant & Soil Science, School of Biological Sciences
[49] University of Exeter,Institute for Transport Studies
[50] The Gola Rainforest National Park,Department of Geography
来源
Nature | 2020年 / 579卷
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摘要
Structurally intact tropical forests sequestered about half of the global terrestrial carbon uptake over the 1990s and early 2000s, removing about 15 per cent of anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions1–3. Climate-driven vegetation models typically predict that this tropical forest ‘carbon sink’ will continue for decades4,5. Here we assess trends in the carbon sink using 244 structurally intact African tropical forests spanning 11 countries, compare them with 321 published plots from Amazonia and investigate the underlying drivers of the trends. The carbon sink in live aboveground biomass in intact African tropical forests has been stable for the three decades to 2015, at 0.66 tonnes of carbon per hectare per year (95 per cent confidence interval 0.53–0.79), in contrast to the long-term decline in Amazonian forests6. Therefore the carbon sink responses of Earth’s two largest expanses of tropical forest have diverged. The difference is largely driven by carbon losses from tree mortality, with no detectable multi-decadal trend in Africa and a long-term increase in Amazonia. Both continents show increasing tree growth, consistent with the expected net effect of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide and air temperature7–9. Despite the past stability of the African carbon sink, our most intensively monitored plots suggest a post-2010 increase in carbon losses, delayed compared to Amazonia, indicating asynchronous carbon sink saturation on the two continents. A statistical model including carbon dioxide, temperature, drought and forest dynamics accounts for the observed trends and indicates a long-term future decline in the African sink, whereas the Amazonian sink continues to weaken rapidly. Overall, the uptake of carbon into Earth’s intact tropical forests peaked in the 1990s. Given that the global terrestrial carbon sink is increasing in size, independent observations indicating greater recent carbon uptake into the Northern Hemisphere landmass10 reinforce our conclusion that the intact tropical forest carbon sink has already peaked. This saturation and ongoing decline of the tropical forest carbon sink has consequences for policies intended to stabilize Earth’s climate.
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页码:80 / 87
页数:7
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