Explain the interrelationships between land cover change and climate, including changes to surface reflectivity (albedo) and the process of natural carbon Flashcards
1
Q
Surface Reflectivity
A
- Surface reflectivity, or albedo, ranges from 0 to 1, with Earth’s average albedo being 0.31, reflecting about one-third of incoming solar radiation.
- Surfaces like snow and ice have high albedo (up to 0.85), making them highly reflective.
- ice sheets and glaciers melting rapidly 273 billion tons lost each year in 2021
- increase absorbed energy increase temp creates a positive feedback loop, more ice melt
- Deforestation main cause - removal increases inso by 20-50% , short-term localised cool effect
- construction of infra such as roads and building decrease albedo, more absorption. 12 climate increase
2
Q
Intro
A
- Landcover changes on Earth impact and interact bi-laterally with climate, often creating positive feedback loops.
- Landcover changes result in changes to surface reflectivity, the amount of solar energy reflected into space and natural carbon sequestration.
3
Q
Carbon Sequestration:
A
- natural sequestration involves the cycling of c02 into trees and other vegetation through photosynthesis, where it is stored for the organism’s lifetime
- LCP such as deforestation disrupt the process, as common slash-and-burn practices release CO2 from burned biomass into the atmosphere (up to 1 ton per tree) Deforestation, particularly in regions like Brazil and Indonesia, releases greenhouse gases, contributing to climate change.
-supports greenhouse effect and warming climate - soils are another sequestration process and are one of the largest ‘sinks’ with the ability to sequest 20% of annual emissions
- through deforestation and agricultural practices like soil tilling. co2 release