科技报告详细信息
Widespread Increase of Boreal Summer Dry Season Length Over the Congo Rainforest
Jiang, Yan ; Tucker, Compton J ; Joiner, Joanna
关键词: AFRICA;    DRYING;    AMAZON REGION (SOUTH AMERICA);    CLIMATE CHANGE;    NORMALIZED DIFFERENCE VEGETATION INDEX;    SOIL MOISTURE;    VEGETATION;    RAIN FORESTS;    CLIMATE MODELS;   
RP-ID  :  GSFC-E-DAA-TN71287
美国|英语
来源: NASA Technical Reports Server
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【 摘 要 】
Dry season length strongly influences tropical rainforest vegetation and is largely determined by precipitation patterns. Over the Amazon, the dry season length has increased since 1979 and severe short-term droughts have occurred. However, similar changes have not been investigated for the world’s second largest rainforest, the Congo Basin, where long-term drying and large-scale declines in forest greenness and canopy water content were reported. Here we present observational evidence for widespread increases in the boreal summer (June–August) dry season length over the Congo Basin since the 1980s, from both hydrological and ecological perspectives. We analyzed both dry season onset and dry season end via multiple independent precipitation and satellite derived vegetation datasets for the period 1979–2015. The dry season length increased by 6.4–10.4 days per decade in the period 1988–2013, primarily attributed to an earlier dry season onset and a delayed dry season end. The earlier dry season onset was caused by long-term droughts due to decreased rainfall in the pre-dry season (April–June). The delayed dry season end resulted from insufficiently replenished soil moisture, which postpones the start of the next wet season and hinders vegetation regrowth. If such changes continue, the enhanced water stress in a warming climate may affect the carbon cycle and alter the composition and structure of evergreen rainforest.
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