Droughts, Wildfires, and Forest Carbon Cycling: A Pantropical Synthesis

Paulo M. Brando, Lucas Paolucci, Caroline C. Ummenhofer, Elsa M. Ordway, Henrik Hartmann, Megan E. Cattau, Ludmila Rattis, Vincent Medjibe, Michael T. Coe, Jennifer Balch

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

161 Scopus citations

Abstract

Tropical woody plants store ∼230 petagrams of carbon (PgC) in their aboveground living biomass. This review suggests that these stocks are currently growing in primary forests at rates that have decreased in recent decades. Droughts are an important mechanism in reducing forest C uptake and stocks by decreasing photosynthesis, elevating tree mortality, increasing autotrophic respiration, and promoting wildfires. Tropical forests were a C source to the atmosphere during the 2015-2016 El Niño-related drought, with some estimates suggesting that up to 2.3 PgC were released. With continued climate change, the intensity and frequency of droughts and fires will likely increase. It is unclear at what point the impacts of severe, repeated disturbances by drought and fires could exceed tropical forests' capacity to recover. Although specific threshold conditions beyond which ecosystem properties could lead to alternative stable states are largely unknown, the growing body of scientific evidence points to such threshold conditions becoming more likely as climate and land use change across the tropics. ▪ Droughts have reduced forest carbon uptake and stocks by elevating tree mortality, increasing autotrophic respiration, and promoting wildfires. ▪ Threshold conditions beyond which tropical forests are pushed into alternative stable states are becoming more likely as effects of droughts intensify.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)555-581
Number of pages27
JournalAnnual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences
Volume47
DOIs
StatePublished - 30 May 2019

Keywords

  • Amazon
  • carbon
  • climate change
  • Congo Basin
  • drought
  • Southeast Asia
  • tree mortality
  • tropical forests

EGS Disciplines

  • Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology
  • Environmental Sciences

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