Deforestation is making Amazon's dry-season drier: Study
The Amazon rainforest plays a vital role in regulating our climate and is one of the most biologically diverse ecosystems on Earth. But recent shifts in land use, vegetation and climate have disrupted the delicate balance between ecosystems and the atmosphere, significantly impacting the water, energy and carbon cycles of the rainforest. The full extent and long-term consequences of these disruptions, however, are not fully understood.
Now, for the first time, research led by scientists at the University of São Paulo in Brazil has identified the impacts of forest loss and human-amplified climate change on the Amazon.
To differentiate the regional effects of deforestation from the global impacts of climate change, researchers analyzed long-term atmospheric and land cover data from 29 sites across the Amazon, between 1985 and 2020.
The findings, published Tuesday in Nature Communications, show that deforestation accounted for a nearly 74% of the reduction in rainfall over the 35 years. It also accounted for 16.5% of the temperature increase during the Amazon's dry season. The researchers found global climate change was largely behind the warming trend.

Researchers focused their study on the dry season, as previous studies have shown that the regional climate effects of deforestation are more substantial and more consequential during this time. It's when the forest is most vulnerable to moisture deficits, and surface–atmosphere interactions become more pronounced.
The team warns that if deforestation remains unchecked, a further decline in total precipitation during the dry season and an even greater rise in temperature could occur. They say the findings underscore the importance of restoring and maintaining forest cover in the Amazon as a "crucial strategy for mitigating climate change and ensuring the stability of ecosystems."
In November, the government of Brazil, home of the Amazon, will host the 30th Conference of the Parties to the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP30). Since the conference is being held in the Amazon, forests are expected to be a key topic of discussion.
"Forests can provide a crucial reprieve in the climate action agenda amidst a rapidly narrowing window of opportunity," COP30 President André Corrêa do Lago said in his inaugural official letter to the conference earlier this year.
-ABC News meteorologist Dan Peck







