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. 2017 Jul 14;12(7):e0180932.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180932. eCollection 2017.

Climate drivers of the Amazon forest greening

Affiliations

Climate drivers of the Amazon forest greening

Fabien Hubert Wagner et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Our limited understanding of the climate controls on tropical forest seasonality is one of the biggest sources of uncertainty in modeling climate change impacts on terrestrial ecosystems. Combining leaf production, litterfall and climate observations from satellite and ground data in the Amazon forest, we show that seasonal variation in leaf production is largely triggered by climate signals, specifically, insolation increase (70.4% of the total area) and precipitation increase (29.6%). Increase of insolation drives leaf growth in the absence of water limitation. For these non-water-limited forests, the simultaneous leaf flush occurs in a sufficient proportion of the trees to be observed from space. While tropical cycles are generally defined in terms of dry or wet season, we show that for a large part of Amazonia the increase in insolation triggers the visible progress of leaf growth, just like during spring in temperate forests. The dependence of leaf growth initiation on climate seasonality may result in a higher sensitivity of these ecosystems to changes in climate than previously thought.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Spatial pattern of climate controls on leaf growing season initiation in South American tropical forests.
Locations of the sites with monthly litterfall productivity measurements are indicated by blue numbers.
Fig 2
Fig 2. Seasonal leaf production (EVI increase) and associated litterfall productivity in 16 tropical forest sites.

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