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      Amazonian forest degradation must be incorporated into the COP26 agenda

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          Selective logging in the Brazilian Amazon.

          Amazon deforestation has been measured by remote sensing for three decades. In comparison, selective logging has been mostly invisible to satellites. We developed a large-scale, high-resolution, automated remote-sensing analysis of selective logging in the top five timber-producing states of the Brazilian Amazon. Logged areas ranged from 12,075 to 19,823 square kilometers per year (+/-14%) between 1999 and 2002, equivalent to 60 to 123% of previously reported deforestation area. Up to 1200 square kilometers per year of logging were observed on conservation lands. Each year, 27 million to 50 million cubic meters of wood were extracted, and a gross flux of approximately 0.1 billion metric tons of carbon was destined for release to the atmosphere by logging.
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            21st Century drought-related fires counteract the decline of Amazon deforestation carbon emissions

            Tropical carbon emissions are largely derived from direct forest clearing processes. Yet, emissions from drought-induced forest fires are, usually, not included in national-level carbon emission inventories. Here we examine Brazilian Amazon drought impacts on fire incidence and associated forest fire carbon emissions over the period 2003–2015. We show that despite a 76% decline in deforestation rates over the past 13 years, fire incidence increased by 36% during the 2015 drought compared to the preceding 12 years. The 2015 drought had the largest ever ratio of active fire counts to deforestation, with active fires occurring over an area of 799,293 km2. Gross emissions from forest fires (989 ± 504 Tg CO2 year−1) alone are more than half as great as those from old-growth forest deforestation during drought years. We conclude that carbon emission inventories intended for accounting and developing policies need to take account of substantial forest fire emissions not associated to the deforestation process.
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              Global maps of twenty-first century forest carbon fluxes

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                Journal
                Nature Geoscience
                Nat. Geosci.
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1752-0894
                1752-0908
                September 2021
                September 02 2021
                September 2021
                : 14
                : 9
                : 634-635
                Article
                10.1038/s41561-021-00823-z
                74d13d42-a2c2-4191-ab40-472e2cdb922c
                © 2021

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

                https://www.springer.com/tdm

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