Amazon P2 Flashcards
The Amazon system has a high precipitation input. What is the total
annual rainfall?
Over 2000mm (rises to 6000mm in some NW regions)
What proportion of the total input of precipitation leaves the Amazon Basin as river discharge into the Atlantic? What happens to the rest?
Approximately 1/3 discharges into the Atlantic. This is below average for a river.
Most of the remaining 2/3s leaves the system via evapotranspiration and can fall again as precipitation.
What is the average temperature in the Amazon and how does this effect water transfers/processes
27oC all year round (no seasons).
High rates of evaporation transferring water to the atmosphere where can condense, form clouds, and fall as precipitation (daily convectional rainfall).
How does the structure of the tropical rainforest effect water transfers/processes?
The almost continuous canopy intercepts up to half of precipitation. Some will be evaporated from leaves the rest reaches the ground as throughfall or stem flow where is taken up by roots and returns to the atmosphere via transpirations. Relatively little water enters groundwater stores or runsoff into rivers.
Identify the biggest cause of deforestation. Give examples.
Agriculture – commercial crops e.g., soy and palm oil and cattle ranching.
Cattle ranching accounts for 80% of forest lost.
How much of the Amazon Forest has already been lost
17% over the last 50 years (close to 1/5)
What proportion of the Amazon Forest will be treeless by 2030 if current rates of deforestation continue
More than 1⁄4 according to the WWF.
How does deforestation or conversion of forest to crops, affect water stores and transfers?
• Vegetation storage reduces.
• Increased river discharge locally. This is due to:
o Fewertreestoabsorbwater. o Lessinterception.
o Reduced infiltration.
• Lower rainfall locally and regionally. This is due to:
o Less evapotranspiration so less condensation, smaller
clouds, and less precipitation.
o Studies by Leeds University suggest that regional
rainfall could reduce by up to 20%.
Give a place example to illustrate the impact of deforestation on the water cycle.
In Rondônia, one of the most heavily deforested areas of Brazil, data shows an 18-day delay in the rainy season compared to the 1970s.
There’s evidence that local areas next to cleared forest have experienced an increase in rainfall. Explain.
Air over a cleared area warms faster than air over forest. This creates localised low pressure as the warmer air rises. This results in localised convectional rainfall.
Burning is often used to clear felled timber for agriculture. This can reduce rainfall. Explain.
The burning produces ultrafine airborne aerosols (particles). Water condenses around airborne particles, but these are so small that the droplets formed are too small and light to fall as rain.
What proportion of all carbon in the biosphere is stored in the Amazon?
1/5 or 20%
Untouched Amazon forests act as a major carbon sink. How much carbon does the Amazon Rainforest absorb in a normal year?
2 billion tonnes
What proportion of global photosynthesis do rainforests
account for?
30-50%
Amazon soils store more carbon than the biomass (vegetation) above. What % of soil carbon is found in the top 30cm of the soil?
52% (over half)