Water and Carbon in the Amazon Case Study Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in Water and Carbon in the Amazon Case Study Deck (100)
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1
Q

What is the world’s largest rainforest?

A

The Amazon Basin

2
Q

How many trees are in the Amazon?

A

300 billion

3
Q

How many different species are in the Amazon?

A

15,000

4
Q

What proportion of the world’s carbon is stored as biomass in the Amazon?

A

1/5

5
Q

How much area does the Amazon rainforest cover?

A

5.5million km2

6
Q

How many countries is the Amazon spread across?

A

9

7
Q

How many tons of carbon is stored in the Amazon?

A

Between 80 and 120 billion tons.

8
Q

What is the total carbon sink of all the tropical rainforests in the world?

A

1-3GtC/year

9
Q

By what percentage are tropical rainforests increasing their above ground biomass?

A

By 0.3-0.5%

10
Q

What is the rising productivity of tropical rainforests due to?

A

Sequestering increased CO2 concentrations.

11
Q

Why is the fact that rainforests are increasing productivity an example of negative feedback?

A

It has offset rising atmospheric levels of CO2.

12
Q

What is the Amazon losing its capacity for?

A

It is losing its capacity to absorb atmospheric CO2.

13
Q

What has halved since the 1990s?

A

The net uptake of carbon by the Amazon.

14
Q

What has been overtaken by fossil fuel emissions in Latin America for the first time?

A

The net uptake of the Amazon

15
Q

What has led to a growth spurt for the Amazon’s trees?

A

An increase in atmospheric CO2

16
Q

What is a negative effect of the tree growth spurt in the Amazon?

A

The trees live faster and die younger leading to a surge in the rate of trees dying across the Amazon.

17
Q

What is the average discharge of water into the Atlantic Ocean by the Amazon? What percentage is this equivalent to?

A

175,000m3

15% of the fresh water entering the oceans each day.

18
Q

Which Amazon tributary is the second largest river in the world in terms of water flow?

A

The Rio Negro

19
Q

How deep is the Rio Negro?

A

100m

20
Q

How wide is the Rio Negro at its mouth?

A

14km

21
Q

Where is the mouth of Rio Negro?

A

Manaus, Brazil

22
Q

What is the average yearly rainfall for the Amazon?

A

2,300mm

23
Q

How much rain can fall in the northwest portion of the Amazon basin?

A

Over 6000mm

24
Q

How much of the rainfall may never reach the ground?

A

Up to half

25
Q

Why does some of the rainfall never reach the ground?

A

It is intercepted by the forest canopy and re-evaporated into the atmosphere.

26
Q

How else can water be released into the atmosphere?

A

Transpiration from plant leaves

27
Q

Where else can water be evaporated from?

A

The ground and rivers.

28
Q

What percentage of water that is evapotranspired back into the atmosphere falls again as rain?

A

48%

29
Q

What percentage of rainfall actually reaches the sea?

A

30%

30
Q

Give an example of a water related closed system loop?

A

Not all water actually reaches the sea or the ground and is instead re-released back into the atmosphere.

31
Q

At what rate was the Brazilian Amazon deforested by between 2000-2007?

A

19368km2 per year

32
Q

Between 2000-2007 an area of forest the size of which country was destroyed?

A

Greece

33
Q

Which country is the 4th largest climate polluter?

A

Brazil

34
Q

What are 75% of Brazil’s greenhouse gas emissions attributed to?

A

Deforestation and land use change

35
Q

What is the removal of Brazilian Amazon mainly done by?

A

Slash and burn

36
Q

What does slash and burn reduce the retention of?

A

Humidity in the soil’s top layer down to a depth of 1 metre.

37
Q

What does slash and burn facilitate?

A

The sudden evaporation of water previously retained in the forest canopy.

38
Q

What does slash and burn increase?

A

Albedo and temperature

39
Q

What is albedo?

A

Reflectiveness

40
Q

What else does slash and burn reduce? (to do with soil)

A

Porosity

41
Q

What is a problem with reduced soil porosity?

A

It causes faster rainfall drainage and erosion and silting of rivers and lakes.

42
Q

What type of clouds are produced over deforested areas?

A

Cumulous

43
Q

What type of cloud does not normally produce rain?

A

Cumulous

44
Q

What 3 things do forests emit when they transpire?

A

Salts
Organic fibres
Water

45
Q

What acts as condensation nuclei?

A

Salts and organic fibres

46
Q

What do condensation nuclei do?

A

Assist in cloud and rain formation

47
Q

What reduces rainfall and cloud formation?

A

The loss of salts and organic fibres which are condensation nuclei.

48
Q

What would happen to the carbon if the store was destroyed?

A

It would be released into the atmosphere.

49
Q

What is the topical rainforest generally replaced with?

A

Pasture land

50
Q

What absorbs more solar radiation- forests or pasture land?

A

Forests absorb approximately 11% more solar radiation

51
Q

What is the average temperature in the rainforest?

A

24.1 degrees C

52
Q

What is the average temperature in pasture lands?

A

33 degrees C

53
Q

What does the average temperature variation of Amazon forest soils at 20cm not exceed?

A

2.8 degrees C

54
Q

What does the average temperature variation under pastures not exceed?

A

8 degrees C

55
Q

What type of land has a lower moisture content level?

A

The moisture content in the upper 1m of pasture soil is 15% less than under nearby forest.

56
Q

What can deeper forest roots pump?

A

More soil moisture to the surface.

57
Q

What type of land produces more air humidity?

A

Forests produce 20-30% more air humidity than pastures.

58
Q

How much more precipitation do forests produce compared to pasture lands?

A

5-20% more

59
Q

What has the mean temperature increase in all tropical regions been every 10 years since the 1970s?

A

0.26 degrees C (+/- 0.05 degrees C)

60
Q

By how many degrees C are temperatures in the Amazon expected to rise by 2050?

A

2-3

61
Q

When did Amazonia experience falling amounts of rainfall?

A

1920s-1970s

62
Q

Has there been a significant change in the amount of rainfall since the 1970s?

A

No

63
Q

How many hectares of forest in the Amazon Basin were lost each year between 2000 and 2010?

A

3.6million hectares each year

64
Q

What are the two causes of the loss of rainforest?

A

Deforestation and climate change

65
Q

What can climate change effect in terms of the different species?

A

Species sustainability as some species are limited by their tolerance to temperature change, drought and seasonality.

66
Q

Why does climate change have an impact on species sustainability?

A

It alters the conditions that are needed to grow and survive.

67
Q

What climate related events have played a role in killing millions of trees?

A

Droughts and unusually high temperatures

68
Q

Did tree mortality rates begin to increase before or after intense droughts started?

A

Well before

69
Q

In what year was an intense drought?

A

2005

70
Q

What would happen to the Amazon if there was a 2degrees C temperature rise above pre-industrial levels?

A

20-40% of the Amazon would die off within 100 years

71
Q

What would a 3 degrees C temperature rise above pre-industrial levels mean for the Amazon?

A

Over 75% of the forest would be destroyed by drought over the following century.

72
Q

What percentage of the Amazon forest would be killed if temperatures rose by 4 degrees C above pre-industrial levels?

A

85% of the forest would die out.

73
Q

How much carbon is stored in the upper 50cm layer of Amazonian soils?

A

4-9kg/m2

74
Q

How much carbon is stored in the upper 50cm of the soil layer in pasture lands?

A

1kg/m2

75
Q

What percentage of carbon is lost to the atmosphere when forests are cleared and burned?

A

30-60%

76
Q

What happens to any unburned vegetation?

A

It decays and the carbon is lost within 10 years.

77
Q

What happens to the soil when forest clearance first occurs?

A

The soils are exposed to heavy tropical rainfall which rapidly washes away the topsoil and attacks the deep weathered layer below. Most of the soil is washed into rivers before the forest clearance has caused a reduction in rainfall.

78
Q

What can changes in total precipitation, extreme rainfall events and seasonality do to river discharge?

A

Reduce river discharge

79
Q

What can changes in total precipitation, extreme rainfall events and seasonality do to the amount of silt washed into rivers?

A

It will increase it and therefore disrupt river transport routes.

80
Q

What can changes in total precipitation, extreme rainfall events and seasonality lead to?

A

Flash flooding

81
Q

What can changes in total precipitation, extreme rainfall events and seasonality do to the freshwater ecosystems?

A

Destroy them

82
Q

What would happen if freshwater ecosystems were destroyed?

A

A source of protein and income would be removed for the local inhabitants.

83
Q

What can changes in total precipitation, extreme rainfall events and seasonality to the water supply?

A

It could destroy it.

84
Q

What would warming temperatures do to temperature dependent species?

A

Kill them

85
Q

What would warming temperatures do to biodiversity?

A

It would change the biodiversity of the ecosystem by introducing new species and killing others.

86
Q

What would warming temperatures do to water-dissolved oxygen concentrations?

A

Reduce them

87
Q

What would happen if water-dissolved oxygen concentrations reduced and why?

A

Eggs and larvae would be destroyed as they rely on oxygen for survival.

88
Q

Give an example of a national park that has been created to try and mitigate the effects of environmental change in Amazonia

A

Tumucumaque National Park

89
Q

How big is the Tumucumaque National Park?

A

3.84 million hectares

90
Q

Give an example of a forest reserve that has been created to try and mitigate the effects of environmental change in Amazonia

A

Pará Rainforest reserve

91
Q

How big is the Pará Rainforest reserve?

A

15 million hectares

92
Q

What type of production could compete with ethanol production by sugar cane by 2030?

A

Forest biofuel production

93
Q

In what year could forest biofuel production compete with ethanol from sugar cane?

A

2030

94
Q

Where does much of Brazil’s industrial (roundwood) timber come from?

A

Reforested areas

95
Q

What percentage of Brazilian forest area is reforested?

A

2%

96
Q

How can degraded forests be enriched?

A

By using native species.

97
Q

What does ACTO stand for?

A

Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organisation

98
Q

What does ACTO promote?

A

Harmonious development

99
Q

What is REDLACH?

A

The Latin American Technical Cooperation Network on Watershed Management

100
Q

What does the TARAPOTO process help to achieve?

A

Harmonious forest development