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Earth Science

Scientists Prove Clear Link Between Deforestation and Local Drop in Rainfall (theguardian.com) 16

For the first time researchers have proven a clear correlation between deforestation and regional precipitation. Scientists hope it may encourage agricultural companies and governments in the Amazon and Congo basin regions and south-east Asia to invest more in protecting trees and other vegetation. From a report: The study found that the more rainforests are cleared in tropical countries, the less local farmers will be able to depend on rain for their crops and pastures. The paper, published in the journal Nature, adds to fears that the degradation of the Amazon is approaching a tipping point after which the rainforest will no longer be able to generate its own rainfall and the vegetation will dry up. People living in deforested areas have long provided anecdotal evidence that their microclimates became drier with lower tree cover. Scientists already knew that killing trees reduces evapotranspiration and thus theorised this would result in lower local rainfall.

The team at Leeds University have now proven this using satellite and meteorological records from 2003-17 across pantropical regions. Even at a small scale, they found an impact, but the decline became more pronounced when the affected area was greater than 50km squared (2,500 sq km). At the largest measured scale of 200km squared (40,000 sq km), the study discovered rainfall was 0.25 percentage points lower each month for every 1 percentage point loss of forest. This can enter into a vicious cycle, as reductions in rainfall lead to further forest loss, increased fire vulnerability and weaker carbon drawdown. One of the authors, Prof Dominick Spracklen of the University of Leeds, said 25% to 50% of the rain that fell in the Amazon came from precipitation recycling by the trees. Although the forest is sometimes described as the "lungs of the world," it functions far more like a heart that pumps water around the region.

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Scientists Prove Clear Link Between Deforestation and Local Drop in Rainfall

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  • And study the water cycle. Should be obvious why removing trees, bulldozing green space, and paving it over so rainfall short circuits the ground and flows into the ocean via rivers leads to local and regional drought. But hey people need strip malls

  • Not suprising (Score:5, Interesting)

    by wakeboarder ( 2695839 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @03:34PM (#63336703)
    Plants are like a moisture battery
  • by Merk42 ( 1906718 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @03:39PM (#63336715)
    People, especially those in power, just do not CARE.
    If the reduced rainfall does not affect them personally, nothing will change.
    • I agree. This is a: "Let them eat cake" moment by the 1% rich and the Political Class. They will spend their money building survival bunkers, and on security, but not a penny to reduce CO2 emissions nor to save diverse natural habitats. As far as the poor goes, they just acknowledge that we exist when they see the 10% labor cost 'input' that has to go into building a product, and ask: "How can we reduce that number"? The system is out of balance, screwed up. I don't see a fix short of a Revolution.
    • They don't care because no one else cares. Those warning of severe ramifications are forced to drink the hemlock tea time and time again. And then the whole thing falls apart, but the money has been made, the wealthiest have made their redoubts, and the best you get is the odd king losing his head.

      Humanity, with a brain that is amongst the complex organizations of matter in the universe, is still basically a bunch of angry, masturbating chimpanzees.

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @03:45PM (#63336731) Homepage

    Humans are around 60% water, trees are around 50%. Living things constantly take in and give off water.

    If you cut down 4 ton of trees, there goes about 2 ton of water that acted like a battery, taking in water when it was wet and giving off water when it was dry. That water it gives off becomes rain.

    Worst of all is that if you cut down 4 tons of trees, plant 10 lbs of seeds, and every year you harvest 1 ton of food, that is removing 1 ton of water from the farm ground and shipping to cities, most of whom dump it in sewage which ends up in the ocean.

    Not hard to understand how if you remove 2 tons of water right away and then remove another ton every year, you are going to have a problem.

    Dry states should not farm, no matter how much sunshine they gate.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      It's not really a problem. Oceans are 99.999% water and they don't need any trees. Just plant your crops downwind of an ocean.
      If you get desperate, mountains are easy to build, it's just a pile of rock. And they make the air cry and you get rain.
  • Logging is good for all things that ail the land. As a life long oregonian I can tell you firsthand that loggin' is good for salmon too. Makes 'em big an' strong. Removing trees is great for wildlife and mountain/gravity local residential water systems both individual and public.

    It looks great and the slash burning is truly very good for breathing, that's history there, son, alive in yer lungs. All those tractors rigs kept to 3rd world noise and pollution standards adding value to the roads they destroy an
  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @06:24PM (#63337331)
    I’m the third world. The people who are chopping down the rainforests aren’t thinking beyond 2-3 years into the future. The idea that the Amazon could convert to tundra sometime in 3-5 generations? That might as well be “forever from now”.

    Something like this could change farming practices in the modern world, where farming companies want their land to be productive for decades. Those big agribusinesses? They might be willing to plant a bunch of trees and wait for them to grow, if it improves crop yields.
  • And it never rains, because it's a desert.

  • New? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by dpilot ( 134227 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @09:00PM (#63337645) Homepage Journal

    I remember hearing a report some time ago, I believe on NPR. that they'd found that the American Southwest was deforested by the Native Americans there hundreds of years ago and it became a desert as a result. Too much use of wood, for construction and cooking fires.

    There were also similar stories told of Easter Island.

    My son-in-law once told me that in Nebraska the farmers consider trees to be in competition with their crops for water, and are therefore eager to see the trees go. However trees don't export water the way crops do. We never learn.

  • I am getting the distinct impression that this was in the science and geography textbooks back in the 1980s.

    Even can smell the mimeograph machine.

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