Hostname: page-component-788cddb947-m6qld Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-10-18T19:54:18.490Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Empirical Evidence for the Effect of Tropical Deforestation on Climatic Change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Colin Clark
Affiliation:
2 Shute Lane, Bruton, Somerset BA10 0BJ, England, UK.

Extract

If large areas of tropical rain-forest are replaced by grassland, there is likely to be about 300 mm less evapo-transpiration and 650–800 mm less rainfall during each year in these areas than is currently experienced. Lower rates of evapotranspiration will allow more energy to be used for sensible heat, and this will lead to surface air temperatures that are higher than currently by about 3°C. Reduced cloud-cover will also lead to even higher temperatures, because clouds have a net cooling effect. When this additional heat is combined with the extrasensible heating, the overall effect is expected to be a rise in temperature of about 4–5°C.

These contentions are based upon data obtained from ‘natural experiments’. They have given results which suggest that tropical deforestation will have a larger effect on temperature than was hitherto expected, and that the effect on both temperature and rainfall will be more widespread than has been expected hitherto. The effects on global climate cannot as yet be determined by a ‘natural experiment’.

The removal of so much of the tropical rain-forest as is now projected will have such a dramatic effect on local and even wider climate that no further replacement of the rain-forest ecocomplex by others or other land-uses should be allowed to take place.

Type
Main Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 1992

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anthes, R.A. (1984). Enhancement of convective precipitation by mesoscale variations in vegetative covering in semiarid regions. Jour. Clim. and Appl. Meteorl., 23, pp. 541–54, illustr.Google Scholar
Barnston, A.G. & Schickendanz, P.T. (1984). The effect of irrigation on warm season precipitation in the Southern Great Plains. Jour. Clim. and Appl. Meteorl., 23, pp. 865–88, illustr.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Budyko, M.I. (1982). The Earth's Climate: Past and Future (Transl. by Author). Internal. Geophysics Series, 29, x + 307 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Charney, J., Quirk, W.J. & Stone, P.H. (1975). Drought in the Sahara: a biogeophysical feedback mechanism. Science, 187, pp. 434–5, illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, J.A. (1989). Discussion of: Implications of tropical deforestation for climate: a comparison of model and observational descriptions of surface energy and hydrological balance. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. Land., B, 324, p. 430.Google Scholar
Dickinson, R.E. (1989). Implications of tropical deforestation for climate: a comparison of model and observational descriptions of surface energy and hydrological balance. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. Land., B, 324, pp. 423–31, illustr.Google Scholar
Dickinson, R.E. & Henderson-Sellers, A. (1988). Modelling tropical deforestation: a study of GCM land-surface parameterization. Quart. Journ. Roy. Met. Soc., 114, pp. 439–62, illustr.Google Scholar
FAO (1963). Production Yearbook, Vol. 16 Tables. FAO, Rome, Italy: xiii + 503 pp.Google Scholar
Fearnside, P.M. (1990). The rate and extent of deforestation in Brazilian Amazonia. Environmental Conservation, 17, pp. 213–26, illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleming, T.H. (1986). Secular changes in Costa Rican rainfall: correlation with elevation. J. Tropical Ecology, 2, pp. 8791, illustr.Google Scholar
Ghuman, B.S. & Lal, R. (1987). Effects of deforestation on soil properties and microclimate of a high rain forest in Southern Nigeria. Pp. 225–44 in The Geophysiology of Amazonia: Vegetation and Climate Interactions (Ed. Dickinson, R.E.). Wiley & Sons, Chichester, England, UK: xvii + 526 pp.Google Scholar
Hartman, D. & Doelling, D. (1991). On the net radiative effectiveness of clouds. J. Geophys. Res., 96, pp. 869–91, illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson-Sellers, A. & Gornitz, V. (1984). Possible climatic impact of land cover transformations, with particular emphasis on tropical deforestation. Climatic Change, 6, pp. 231–57, illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson-Sellers, A. & Robinson, P.J. (1986). Contemporary Climatology. Longman, London, England, UK: viii + 261 pp.Google Scholar
Hong, E. (1987). The Natives of Sarawak, Survival in Borneo's Vanishing Forest. Institut Masjarakat, Malaysia: 259 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Idso, S. (1980). The climatological significance of a doubling of Earth's atmospheric Carbon Dioxide concentration. Science, 207, pp. 1462–3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Idso, S. (1982). A surface air temperature response function for Earth's atmosphere. Boundary Layer Meteorl., 22, pp. 227–32, illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keay, R.W.J. (1990). Perspective on the tropical rain-forest. Environmental Conservation, 17, pp. 193–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kiehl, J.T. & Ramanathan, V. (1990). Comparison of cloud forcing derived from the Earth Radiation Budget Experiment with that simulated by the NCAR Community Climate Model. J. Geophys. Res., 95, D8, pp. 11679–98, illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kovda, V.A. (1978). A precarious balance upset. Pp. 109–11 in Climate and Human Ecology (Ed. Norwine, J.). Armstrong, Texas, USA: 236 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Lean, J. & Warrilow, D.A. (1989). Simulation of the regional climatic impact of Amazon deforestation. Nature (London), 342, pp. 411–3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McNaughton, K.G. (1989). Micrometeorology of shelter belts and forest edges. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. Land., B, 324, pp. 351–68, illustr.Google Scholar
Malingreau, J.P., Tucker, C.J. & Laporte, N. (1989). A VHRR for monitoring global tropical deforestation. Int. J. Remote Sensing, 10, pp. 855–67, illustr.Google Scholar
Matthews, E. (1983). Global vegetation and land use: new high-resolution data bases for climate studies. Journ. Clim. and Appl. Meteorl., 22, pp. 474–87, tables.Google Scholar
Mitchell, J.F.B., Senior, C.A. & Ingram, W.J. (1989). CO2 and climate: a missing feedback? Nature (London), 341, pp. 132–4, illustr.Google Scholar
Myers, N. (1980). The Conversion of Moist Tropical Forest. Report to National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council, Washington, DC, USA: ix + 205 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Myers, N. (1988). Tropical deforestation and climate change. Environmental Conservation, 15(4), pp. 293–8.Google Scholar
Nicholson, S. (1988). Land surface atmospheric interaction. Progress in Physical Geography, 12, pp. 3665.Google Scholar
Ohring, G. & Clapp, P. (1980). The effect of changes in cloud amount on the net radiation at the top of the atmosphere. Journal Atmospheric Sciences, 37, pp. 447–54, illustr.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Otterman, J. (1981). Satellite and field studies of man's impact on the surface in arid regions. Tellus, 33, pp. 6877, illustr.Google Scholar
Potter, G.L., Ellsaesser, H.W., MacCracken, M.C. & Luther, P.M. (1975). Possible climatic impact of tropical deforestation. Nature (London), 258, pp. 697–8, illustr.Google Scholar
Potter, G.L., Ellsaesser, H.W., MacCracken, M.C. & Ellis, J.S. (1981). Albedo change by man: test of climatic effects. Nature (London), 291, pp. 47–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramanathan, V., Cess, R.D., Harrison, E.F., Minnis, P., Barkstrom, B.R., Ahmad, E. & Hartmann, D. (1989). Cloud radiative forcing and climate: results from the Earth Radiation Budget Experiment. Science, 243, pp. 5763, illustr.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Reed, W.W. (1926). Climatological data for the West Indian Islands. Monthly Weather Rev., 54, pp. 133–60, illustr.Google Scholar
Reifsnyder, W.E. (1987). Comments on: Micrometeorology of an Amazonian Rain Forest. Pp. 270–2 in The Geophysiology of Amazonia: Vegetation and Climate Interactions (Ed. Dickinson, R.E.). J. Wiley and Sons, Chichester, England, UK: xvii + 526 pp.Google Scholar
Ripley, E.A. (1976). Drought in the Sahara: insufficient biogeophysical feedback? Science, 191, p. 100, illustr.Google Scholar
Salati, E. & Vose, P.B. (1984). Amazon Basin: a system in equilibrium. Science, 225, pp. 129–38, illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salati, E., Dall'Olio, A., Matsui, E. & Gat, J.R. (1979). Recycling of water in the Amazon Basin: an isotopic study. Water Resources Res., 15, pp. 1250–8, illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schnell, R.C. et al. (1991). Decrease of summer tropospheric ozone concentrations in Antarctica. Nature (London), 351, pp. 726–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sellers, W.D. (1965). Physical Climatology. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, USA: 272 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Shukla, J. & Mintz, Y. (1982). Influence of land-surface evapotrans-piration on the Earth's climate. Science, 215, pp. 1498–501, illustr.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shukla, J., Nobre, C. & Sellers, P. (1990). Amazon deforestation and climatic change. Science, 247, pp. 1322–25, illustr.Google Scholar
Shuttleworth, W.J. (1988). Evaporation from Amazonian rainforest. Proc. Roy. Soc. Land., B, 233, pp. 321–46, illustr.Google Scholar
Shuttleworth, W.J. et al. (1985). Daily variations of temperature and humidity within and above Amazonian forest. Weather, 40, pp. 102–8, illustr.Google Scholar
UNEP (1987). Environmental Data Yearbook. Basil Blackwell, Oxford, England, UK: vii + 352 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Webster, P.J. & Stephens, G.L. (1984). Cloud-radiation interactions and the climate problem. Pp. 6378 in The Global Climate (Ed. Houghton, J.T.). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, UK: v + 233 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Zhang, K. (1983). The influence of deforestation of tropical rainforest on local climate and disaster in Xishuangbanna region of China. Climatological Notes, 35, pp. 223–36, illustr.Google Scholar