tropical rainforests Flashcards
how much carbon does amazonia hold per year
2.4bn tonnes/year
what are the differences between how much carbon woodland and cropland hold
woodland, 180000 tonnes/hector
cropland 16.4 tonnes/hector
how is water stored in the ground in tropical rainforests
Aquifers, a store of water underground (permeable rock)
what is the heat balance
inputs of solar energy and heat outputs from terrestrial land and gas
why are equatorial regions hot
- receives the most concentrated solar radiation
- earth’s surface heats up and re radiates this heat out as long wave radiation warming the air above the thermal equator
how much land does the amazon occupy
6 million km squared
describe the distribution of the forest across different countries
70% occupies brazil but the forest also extends to neighboring countries such as Venezuela, Peru, Columbia, Bolivia
describe the temperature in amazonia
high, between 25-35 degrees Celsius
describe rainfall in amazonia
- high annual rainfall >2000mm, with no fully dry season
- 50-60% of rainfall is recycled by evapotranspiration in a strong feedback loop, 48% of this will fall again as rain
- interception by trees is significant, around 10%
why are tropical temperatures not as extreme as sub-tropical deserts
significant cloud coverage
why are rates of evapotranspiration high
high temperatures, abundant moisture, dense vegetation, most evaporation is from interception moisture on leaf surfaces
describe the quality of soil nutrients in the forest
heavy rainfall means there is leaching of the nutrients in the soil but rapid decomposition nourishes trees for growth
describe plant growth in amazonia
humid equatorial climate creates perfect conditions for plant growth, net primary productivity is high with a biomass between 400 and 700 tonnes/hector
how much carbon does the amazon rainforest absorb per year
Amazonia absorbs 2.4 billion tonnes of carbon per year
describe the exchanges of carbon in the forest
- rapid exchanges of carbon between the atmosphere, biosphere and soil
- warm, humid conditions ensure the rapid decomposition of material and quick release of CO2
- meanwhile the rates of carbon fixation are high from photosynthesis
- the forests leached and acidic soils contain only limited carbon and nutrient stores, the fact that such poor soils support a biome with the highest NNP emphasises the speed with which organic material is broken down