W&C - The Amazon Flashcards

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1
Q

4 to list

Basic facts about the Amazon rainforest:

A
  • World’s largest rainforest and one of the most diverse.
  • 300 billion trees and 15,000 species.
  • Covers aroun 5.5 million km2
  • Spread across 9 countries
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2
Q

How much of the earth’s carbon does the Amazon store?

A

1/5 of all the carbon in the planet’s biomass.

Estimated between 80 and 120 billion tons of carbon.

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3
Q

Location of the Amazon

A

South America

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4
Q

1-3GtC/year

A

The carbon sink that the Amazon forms with other rainforest.

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5
Q

The carbon sink that the Amazon forms with other rainforest.

A

1-3GtC/year

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6
Q

Give an example of negative feedback involving the Amazon and carbon.

A
  • Increased carbon in the atmosphere due to human activity.
  • Sequestering of increased CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere increases the productivity of tropical rainforests.
  • Offsets the rising atmospheric levels of CO2
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7
Q

A study in 2015 revealed what about the Amazon?

A

It is losing its capacity to absorb CO2 from the atmosphere.

  • Peak 1990s - 2 billion tonnes of CO2/year.*
  • Now, this has been havled.*
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8
Q

What will lead to a surge in the rates of trees dying across the Amazon?

A
  • Increase in atmospheric CO2 led to growth spurt for the Amazon’s trees.
  • Growth stimulation feeds through the system, causing trees to live faster, and so die younger.
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9
Q

What is the average discharge of water from the Amazon?

Where does this discharge go?

A

175 000 m3/s or around 15 per cent of the fresh water entering the oceans each day.

Flows into Atlantic Ocean.

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10
Q

Name a tributary of the Amazon.

A

Rio Negro - second largest river in the world in terms of water flow.

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11
Q

What is the average rainfall across the whole Amazon rainfall?

How much never reaches the ground?

A

2, 300 mm annually.

Up to half of it never reaches the ground.

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12
Q

Of the rainfall evapotranspired back into the atmosphere, how much falls again as rain?

A

48%

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13
Q

How much rainfall actually reaches the sea?

What happens to the rest?

A

30%.

The rest is caught up in the constant closed system loop.

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14
Q

Describe the movement of water throughout the Amazon:

A
  • Rainfall.
  • Half intercepted by the canopy and re-evaporated into atmosphere.
  • Additional water evaporates from the ground and rivers or is released into the atmosphere by transpiration from plant leaves.
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15
Q

Deforestation of Amazon

A

Brazilian Amazon deforested at rate of nearly 20 000 km2 per year.

Area larger than Greece destroyed.

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16
Q

Describe the impact of slash and burn techniques on the Amazon.

A
  • Reduces retention of humidity in the soil’s top layer down to depth of 1 metre.
  • Facilitates sudden evaporation of water retained in forest canopy.
  • Increases albedo (reflectiveness) and temperature.
  • Reduces porosity of soil, causing faster rainfall drainage, erosion and silting of rivers and lakes.
17
Q

Describe the evaporation of moisture from deforested areas:

A

Form shallow cumulous clouds which usually do not produce rain.

18
Q

Why does deforestation inhibit cloud formation and reduce rainfall?

A
  • Forests emit salts and organic fibres along with water when they transpire.
  • Act as condensation nuclei and assist in cloud and rain formation.
19
Q

Why has their been a net loss of forest in the Amazon Basin?

A

Deliberate deforestation and climate change.

20
Q

How can climate change cause a net loss in forests?

A
  • Some species limited by tolerance to temperature change, drought and seasonality.
  • CC can affect species sustainability by directly altering conditions needed to grow and survive.
21
Q

What did a 2009 study conclude about temperature rises and the effects on the amazon?

A
  • 2°C temperature rise abouve pre-industrial levels would see 20-40% Amazon die off.
  • 4°C rise would kill 85%
22
Q

How much carbon do Amazonian soild contain in comparison to pasturelands?

A

4-9 kg of carbon in upper 50cm of soil layer, while pasturelands contain only about 1 kg/m2.

23
Q

What happens when forest clearance first occurs?

A
  • Soils are exposed to the heacy tropical rainfall.
  • This 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 the rainfall.
24
Q

Changes in total precipitation, extreme rainfall events and seasonality may lead to what in river?

A
  • Overall reduction in discharge.
  • Increase in silt washed into rivers - disrupt river transport routes.
  • Flash flooding
  • Destroy freshwater ecosystems - remove source of proteina and income to locals
  • Destroy water supply for Amazonian peoples.
25
Q

How might warming temperatures affect rivers?

A
  • Kill of temperature dependent species.
  • Change in biodiversity of river system by introducing new species and killing others.
  • Reduce water-dissolved oxygen concentrations, could destory eggs and larvae, which rely on dissolved oxygen for survival.
26
Q

How are people mitigating against effects of environmental change in Amazonia?

A
  • Creation of national parks and forest reserves, eg Para Rainforest reserve.
  • Forest biofuel prouction could compete with ethanol production from sugar cane by 2030.
  • Refroestation.
  • Enrichment of degraded forests using native species.
27
Q

What are some National and International agreesments aimed to protect Amazonia against the effects of environmental change?

A
  • TARAPOTO process to help achieve harmonious forest development.
  • Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organisation (ACTO) to help promote harmonious development.