Saturday, May 16, 2015

Brazil Wildfires



Brazil as all countries suffers from wildfires.  The image below shows smoke from the Amazon basin which according to the articles I read gets into the roots and burns for years.  Drought has also cause widespread fires.  According to the article it is up 160% since September.
THE AMAZON RAINFOREST ON FIRE
 


 
Satellite of the forest fires along the Amazon River “(Smoke from wildfires covering almost all of the Amazon on August 20, 2014. For reference, bottom edge of frame is 1,000 miles and the Amazon River flows from middle left until it terminates at upper right into the South Atlantic. Image source: LANCE MODIS.)” (Amazon)
 
“Conditions in Context: 3 Percent of the Amazon Lost To Fire From 1999-2010
The new fires originated in a region now known to harbor ongoing understory fires. These fires burn beneath the interlaced root systems of the Amazon and have been discovered to continue to smolder year-round. During times of intense heat and drought, these fires can break through to the surface and more intensely burn through large swaths of forestland. After burning, they sink back into the understory, waiting for another heat/drought trigger.
 
 
Last year, NASA published a study which found that fully 3 percent of the Amazon had likely been lost to fires during the period of 1999-2010. A primary culprit for these losses was found to be understory fires, which NASA identified as a significant threat to the Amazon forest system” (Amazon)

(3 percent or 33,500 square miles of a 1.2 million square mile area under investigation burned from 1999-2010 according to a 2013 NASA study. Location of fires indicated in orange.) (Amazon)
“Perhaps most significantly, the NASA study implicated climate change as the primary cause for these fires, finding that drought and heatwaves related to increases in human heat trapping gasses had depleted ground moisture levels, resulting in a greatly increased instance of fires.
Post 2010, the satellite record indicates that these fires have continued to grow in intensity. And so the risk to the Amazon expands.
Overall, the Amazon currently stores about 120 gig tons of carbon. It represents about 10% of the global uptake of carbon from the atmosphere through forest tree and plant respiration. But as the Amazon burns and becomes deforested, it shifts from being a carbon absorber to a carbon emitter. Currently, depleted and burning areas of the Amazon are estimated to emit 500 megatons of CO2 each year. And though this has not yet tipped the balance to make the Amazon a net carbon emitter, human climate change and deforestation is driving the world’s largest rainforest rapidly in that direction.
Under human driven climate change and deforestation, the heat and drought situation will only worsen for Brazil. Even without clear cutting, the fires will expand and, eventually, the rainforest will be consumed. Without substantial mitigation action by humans, it is bound to happen. The vast carbon store that is the rainforest will almost certainly begin adding to the already rapacious human heating effect. A process that will continue for decades and will only end once the rainforest is gone entirely” (Amazon)
 
Brazil experiences sharp rise in forest fires. (Photo: AFP)
Published 12 September 2014 (15 hours 46 minutes ago)
New data published by the Brazilian National Institute for Space Research indicates a 160 percent increase in forest fires during September.
According to a new satellite data collected by the National Institute for Space Research (INPE) found that in September there were 15,622 forest fires across Brazil, which marks an increase of over 160 percent compared to the same period in 2013.             
The increase in forest fires is believed to be caused by a combination of slash-and-burn agricultural techniques, declining levels of precipitation and deforestation, which in turn, creates much drier conditions due to exposure to the wind and sun, increasing the risk of wildfires spreading inside the forest.     
Due to the impacts of climate change, change is expected to warm the air in the Amazon region by several degrees and substantially reduce regional precipitation, making understanding the interactions between droughts and fires even more important.
As a result of the findings, the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (IBAMA) has recommended efforts to install natural firebreaks as well as providing land management courses to local populations.
Despite the sharp increase in forest fires, a 2014 report by the Union Of Concerned Scientists found that 80 percent of the original Amazon forest remains standing, and deforestation rates in Brazil are down 70 percent in 2013 compared with the 1996–2005 average. (www.telesurtv.net)
The data also revealed that Mato Grosso is the state most affected by fires, followed by Para and Maranhao. Together, the three states have accounted for nearly 44 percent of all outbreaks during September.
 
Brazil wildfires threaten homes and national parks  15 August 2010 Last updated at 08:31 BST    Emergency services in Brazil are struggling to control wildfires that have destroyed large areas of national parks and hundreds of homes in the north and east of the country.
    Brazil's National Space Research Institute said there had been a three-fold increase this year in the number of fires threatening rural areas in five states.Paulo Cabral reports from Sao Paulo. (BBC)
 
 
 Work Sited
 Amazon Rainforest Wildfires Scorch Through Drought-Plagued Brazil During Southern Hemisphere Winter, Aug. 20, 2014,  https://robertscribbler.wordpress.com/.../amazon-rainforest-wildfires-scorch...
Links from above site:
 
 
www.telesurtv.net/.../-Brazil-Sees-Increase-in-Forest-Fires--20140913-0002...Sep 12, 2014 - New data published by the Brazilian National Institute for Space Research indicates a 160 percent increase in forest fires during September, http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=7&ved=0CDMQFjAG&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.telesurtv.net%2Fenglish%2Fnews%2F-Brazil-Sees-Increase-in-Forest-Fires--20140913-0002.html&ei=EpZXVZ6hH8WKyAT9q4CgDg&usg=AFQjCNE9xnIA7jdxuirugUSsA66CSKvNew&bvm=bv.93564037,d.aWw
 
 

3 comments:

  1. Good morning,Linda. Our countries suffer the same fate. In fact, all the Latin American countries affected,:Argentina is going thru a severe drought and at the same time battling huge wildfires, One fire has destroyed one of Argentina's oldest National forests. The trees in this forest took centuries to develop like the forests in Yosemite National Park.and our great Redwood Forests. With the weather conditions our country's have been experiencing there will be more devastation in the near future.

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  2. For some reason, I always used to imagine the "rain forest" to be immune from wildfires. I figured they were more common in dry, regions with cold winters and hot summers. Interesting to see how the density of the trees and roots leads to fires that burn underground year round. Unfortunate that the rising temperatures and drought conditions are causing this region to experience such a rapid increase in wildfires.

    ReplyDelete
  3. For some reason, I always used to imagine the "rain forest" to be immune from wildfires. I figured they were more common in dry, regions with cold winters and hot summers. Interesting to see how the density of the trees and roots leads to fires that burn underground year round. Unfortunate that the rising temperatures and drought conditions are causing this region to experience such a rapid increase in wildfires.

    ReplyDelete