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1. Identity statement
Reference TypeConference Paper (Conference Proceedings)
Sitemtc-m21c.sid.inpe.br
Holder Codeisadg {BR SPINPE} ibi 8JMKD3MGPCW/3DT298S
Identifier8JMKD3MGP3W34R/44JURTE
Repositorysid.inpe.br/mtc-m21c/2021/04.30.18.11
Last Update2021:04.30.18.11.30 (UTC) simone
Metadata Repositorysid.inpe.br/mtc-m21c/2021/04.30.18.11.30
Metadata Last Update2022:04.03.22.29.11 (UTC) administrator
Secondary KeyINPE--PRE/
DOI10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6347
Citation KeyBurtonKeJoBeCaAn:2021:SoAmFi
TitleSouth American fires and their impacts on ecosystems increase with continued emissions
Year2021
Access Date2024, May 19
Secondary TypePRE CI
Number of Files1
Size277 KiB
2. Context
Author1 Burton, Chantelle
2 Kelley, Douglas
3 Jones, Chris
4 Betts, Richard
5 Cardoso, Manoel Ferreira
6 Anderson, Liana
ORCID1 0000-0003-0201-5727
2 0000-0003-1413-4969
3 0000-0002-7141-9285
4
5 0000-0003-2447-6882
Group1
2
3
4
5 DIIAV-CGCT-INPE-MCTI-GOV-BR
Affiliation1 Met Office
2 UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
3 Met Office
4 Met Office
5 Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE)
6 Centro Nacional de Monitoramento e Alertas de Desastres Naturais (CEMADEN)
Author e-Mail Address1 chantelle.burton@metoffice.gov.uk
2
3
4
5 manoelfcardoso@gmail.com
Conference NameEGU General Assembly
Conference LocationOnline
Date19-30 apr.
PublisherEGU
History (UTC)2021-04-30 18:11:30 :: simone -> administrator ::
2022-04-03 22:29:11 :: administrator -> simone :: 2021
3. Content and structure
Is the master or a copy?is the master
Content Stagecompleted
Transferable1
Content TypeExternal Contribution
AbstractUnprecedented fire events in recent years are leading to a demand for improved understanding of how climate change is already affecting fires, and how this could change in the future. Increased fire activity in South America is one of the most concerning of all the recent events, given the potential impacts on local health and the global climate from loss of large carbon stores under future environmental change. However, due to the complexity of interactions and feedbacks, and lack of complete representation of fire biogeochemistry in many climate models, there is currently low agreement on whether climate change will cause fires to become more or less frequent in the future, and what impact this will have on ecosystems. Here we use the latest climate simulations from the UK Earth System Model UKESM1 to understand feedbacks in fire, dynamic vegetation, and terrestrial carbon stores using the fire-enabled land surface model JULES-INFERNO, taking into account future scenarios of change in emissions and land use. Based on evaluation of the modelling framework performance for the present day, we address the specific policy-relevant question: how much fire-induced carbon loss will there be over South America at different global warming levels in the future? We find that burned area and fire emissions are projected to increase in the future due to hotter and drier conditions, which leads to large reductions in carbon storage especially when combined with increasing land-use conversion. The model simulates a 38% loss of carbon at 4°C under the highest emission scenario, which could be reduced to 8% if temperature rise is limited to 1.5°C. Our results provide a critical assessment of ecosystem resilience under future climate change, and could inform the way fire and land-use is managed in the future to reduce the most deleterious impacts of climate change.
AreaCST
Arrangementurlib.net > BDMCI > Fonds > Produção a partir de 2021 > CGCT > South American fires...
doc Directory Contentaccess
source Directory Contentthere are no files
agreement Directory Content
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4. Conditions of access and use
data URLhttp://mtc-m21c.sid.inpe.br/ibi/8JMKD3MGP3W34R/44JURTE
zipped data URLhttp://mtc-m21c.sid.inpe.br/zip/8JMKD3MGP3W34R/44JURTE
Languageen
Target FileEGU21-6347-print.pdf
User Groupsimone
Visibilityshown
Update Permissionnot transferred
5. Allied materials
Next Higher Units8JMKD3MGPCW/46KUATE
Citing Item List
Host Collectionurlib.net/www/2017/11.22.19.04
6. Notes
Empty Fieldsarchivingpolicy archivist booktitle callnumber copyholder copyright creatorhistory descriptionlevel dissemination e-mailaddress edition editor format isbn issn keywords label lineage mark mirrorrepository nextedition notes numberofvolumes organization pages parameterlist parentrepositories previousedition previouslowerunit progress project publisheraddress readergroup readpermission resumeid rightsholder schedulinginformation secondarydate secondarymark serieseditor session shorttitle sponsor subject tertiarymark tertiarytype type url versiontype volume
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