Carbon emissions from tropical deforestation and regrowth based on satellite observations for the 1980s and 1990s
Top Cited Papers
- 16 October 2002
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 99 (22) , 14256-14261
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.182560099
Abstract
Carbon fluxes from tropical deforestation and regrowth are highly uncertain components of the contemporary carbon budget, due in part to the lack of spatially explicit and consistent information on changes in forest area. We estimate fluxes for the 1980s and 1990s using subpixel estimates of percent tree cover derived from coarse (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer) satellite data in combination with a terrestrial carbon model. The satellite-derived estimates of change in forest area are lower than national reports and remote-sensing surveys from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization Forest Resource Assessment (FRA) in all tropical regions, especially for the 1980s. However, our results indicate that the net rate of tropical forest clearing increased ≈10% from the 1980s to 1990s, most notably in southeast Asia, in contrast to an 11% reduction reported by the FRA. We estimate net mean annual carbon fluxes from tropical deforestation and regrowth to average 0.6 (0.3–0.8) and 0.9 (0.5–1.4) petagrams (Pg)⋅yr−1 for the 1980s and 1990s, respectively. Compared with previous estimates of 1.9 (0.6–2.5) Pg⋅yr−1 based on FRA national statistics of changes in forest area, this alternative estimate suggests less “missing” carbon from the global carbon budget but increasing emissions from tropical land-use change.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Recent patterns and mechanisms of carbon exchange by terrestrial ecosystemsNature, 2001
- Increased damage from fires in logged forests during droughts caused by El NiñoNature, 2001
- Tropical deforestation in the Bolivian AmazonEnvironmental Conservation, 2001
- Carbon balance of the terrestrial biosphere in the Twentieth Century: Analyses of CO2, climate and land use effects with four process‐based ecosystem modelsGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 2001
- A REVIEW OFNATIONALEMISSIONSINVENTORIES FROMSELECTNON-ANNEXI COUNTRIES: Implications for Counting Sources and Sinks of CarbonAnnual Review of Energy and the Environment, 1999
- Continuous fields of vegetation characteristics at the global scale at 1‐km resolutionJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 1999
- The U.S. Carbon Budget: Contributions from Land-Use ChangeScience, 1999
- Assessing Brazil's carbon budget: I. Biotic carbon poolsForest Ecology and Management, 1995
- Tropical Deforestation and Habitat Fragmentation in the Amazon: Satellite Data from 1978 to 1988Science, 1993
- Refining estimates of carbon released from tropical land-use changeCanadian Journal of Forest Research, 1991