ID do Resumo: 726
Towards understanding the tipping point of a transitional forest in Mato Grosso: results of a large-scale fire experiment.
Global climate change associated alterations of temperature and
precipitation over the Amazon region are predicted to cause
widespread forest dieback by the end of the twenty-first century,
but with positive feedbacks between drought and fire, dieback may
be much faster than predicted. To improve our understanding of
these possible positive feedbacks, we conducted a long-term, large-
scale fire experiment in a transitional forest in Mato Grosso. The
experiment consisted of three 50-ha plots: a control plot (CP); a
plot that burned in 2004 and in 2007 (B2); and a plot that burned
annually from 2004 to 2007 (B4). In each plot we measured leaf area
index (LAI), tree growth rates, and annual litterfall. We also
conducted phenological observations on the 10 most common tree
species. Overall, the forest was little affected by the first
experimental fire. LAI was ~19% lower in B2 and B4 than in CP; tree
growth rates in burned plots was 34% higher than in CP; litterfall
did not differ among treatments; and, more trees fruited and
flowered in B1 and B4 than in CP. Although two subsequent burns
increased differences between CP and B4, substantial changes in
forest structure/metabolism occurred only after the 2007 fires.
During the 2007 fires, high ambient temperature, low humidity, and
scant prior precipitation created perfect conditions for intense
fires, particularly where fuel loads were elevated due to tree and
branch mortality (B2). These results reinforce the notion that the
interaction among forest fires, past forest disturbances, and
droughts may have multiplicative effects on forest structure and
dynamics in the Xingu region.
Sessão: Fogo - Fogo, seca e mudanças na estrutura e composição da vegetação.
Tipo de Apresentação: Oral
|