0000000000430717

AUTHOR

Kirsten Thonicke

showing 3 related works from this author

Changes in Climate and Land Use Over the Amazon Region: Current and Future Variability and Trends

2018

This paper shows recent progress in our understanding of climate variability and trends in the Amazon region, and how these interact with land use change. The review includes an overview of up-to-date information on climate and hydrological variability, and on warming trends in Amazonia, which reached 0.6-0.7 °C over the last 40 years, with 2016 as the warmest year since at least 1950 (0.9 °C +0.3°C). We focus on local and remote drivers of climate variability and change. We review the impacts of these drivers on the length of dry season, the role of the forest in climate and carbon cycles, the resilience of the forest, the risk of fires and biomass burning, and the potential “die back” of …

climate variability010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences0208 environmental biotechnologyClimate change02 engineering and technologytipping point01 natural sciencesAmazoniaDeforestationdeforestationLand use land-use change and forestryEl Niñolcsh:Sciencemoisture transport0105 earth and related environmental sciencesLand useAmazon rainforestbusiness.industryMoisture recyclingEnvironmental resource managementTipping point (climatology)020801 environmental engineeringGeographySustainabilityGeneral Earth and Planetary Scienceslcsh:QbusinessFrontiers in Earth Science
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Quantifying the spatial extent and intensity of recent extreme drought events in the Amazon rainforest and their impacts on the carbon cycle

2020

Over the last decades, the Amazon rainforest was hit by multiple severe drought events. Here we assess the severity and spatial extent of the extreme drought years 2005, 2010, and 2015/2016 in the Amazon region and their impacts on the carbon cycle. As an indicator of drought stress in the Amazon rainforest, we use the widely applied maximum cumulative water deficit (ΔMCWD). Evaluating an ensemble of ten state-of-the-art precipitation datasets for the Amazon region, we find that the spatial extent of the drought in 2005 ranges from 2.8 to 4.2 (mean = 3.2) million km2 (46–71 % of the Amazon basin, mean = 53 %) where ΔMCWD indicates at le…

Drought stressAmazon rainforestAnomaly (natural sciences)Environmental sciencePrecipitationPhysical geographySpatial extentWater deficitAmazon basinCarbon cycle
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Recent extreme drought events in the Amazon rainforest: assessment of different precipitation and evapotranspiration datasets and drought indicators

2022

Over the last decades, the Amazon rainforest has been hit by multiple severe drought events. Here, we assess the severity and spatial extent of the extreme drought years 2005, 2010 and 2015/16 in the Amazon region and their impacts on the regional carbon cycle. As an indicator of drought stress in the Amazon rainforest, we use the widely applied maximum cumulative water deficit (MCWD). Evaluating nine state-of-the-art precipitation datasets for the Amazon region, we find that the spatial extent of the drought in 2005 ranges from 2.2 to 3.0 (mean =2.7) ×106 km2 (37 %–51 % of the Amazon basin, mean =45 %), where MCWD indicates at least moderate drought conditions (relative MCWD anomaly <-0…

[SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean Atmosphere[SDU.ENVI]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Continental interfaces environmentEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEarth-Surface Processes
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