last
updated 15th December 05
by 4ecotips.com
Weakening circulation driving
tropical and subtropical climate
New simulations of 21st-century climate
show that human-produced changes in
land cover could produce additional
warming in the Amazon region comparable
to that caused by greenhouse gases,
while counteracting greenhouse warming
by 25% to 50% in some midlatitude
areas.
The simulations from the National
Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
show the importance of including land
cover in computer-model depictions
of global change. The results were
published in 9 December issue of Science.
Lead author Johannes Feddema (University
of Kansas) carried out the modeling
work with six coauthors from NCAR
while on sabbatical at the center.
The team linked NCAR's Land Surface
Model with the global-scale Parallel
Climate Model, developed by scientists
at NCAR and the US Department of Energy
under DOE sponsorship.
This marks the first time a simulation
of 21st-century warming includes not
only interactive ocean and atmosphere
components but also changes in land
cover caused by agriculture, deforestation,
and other human activities.
"The choices humans make about
future land use could have a significant
impact on regional and seasonal climates,"
says Feddema.
Taken together, the impacts of greenhouse
gases around the globe should far
outweigh the regional effects of land-cover
change, according to Feddema. However,
the regions with extensive agriculture
and deforestation also tend to be
highly populated, so the effects of
land-cover change are often focused
where people live.
"Compared to global warming,
land use is a relatively small influence.
However, there are regions where it's
really important," he says.
To bracket a range of possibilities,
the group examined two contrasting
scenarios for greenhouse emissions
and land cover put forth by the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change. The more
pessimistic scenario assumed that
emissions will increase steadily,
while the more optimistic scenario
assumes rapid gains in energy efficiency.
The results for the first scenario
show that deforestation adds 2°C
(3.6°F) or more to surface temperature
across the Amazon by 2100. Cooling
occurs in the nearby Pacific and Atlantic
waters with a weakening of the large-scale
Hadley circulation that drives tropical
and subtropical climate. In turn,
moisture penetrates further north
and produces a cooling, moistening
influence across the US Southwest
during that region's summer monsoon.
While deforestation acts to warm
the tropics by replacing forests with
less productive pasture, converting
midlatitude forests and grasses to
cropland tends to act as a cooling
influence, because the crops tend
to reflect more sunlight and release
more moisture into the air.
Feddema and colleagues found that
expanded agriculture tends to counteract
global warming by as much as 50% across
parts of North America, Europe, and
Asia. In Canada and Russia, boreal
forests add to regional warming as
they spread north over time.
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