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Borneo’s forests face dire future from global warming

Dim outlook?
Dim outlook for Borneo’s rainforests?


Already wracked by extensive deforestation and forest degradation, the future looks grim for Borneo’s tropical rainforests, reports a new study published in the Journal of Geophysical Research-Biogeosciences.




Combining historical records with field observations and global climate models Tomo’omi Kumagai and Amilcare Porporato of Duke University find that an sharp increase in drought conditions — a product of warmer temperatures in the Indian Ocean and higher frequency of el Niño events — will make it more difficult for Borneo’s rainforest tree species to survive.




“As El Niño events become more frequent in the future in response to warming in the tropical oceans, even the species of trees that can adapt to drought conditions will be at increased risk of dying off,” stated a press release from the American Geophysical Union (AGU). “The small number of species that cannot adapt well to drought conditions will be at even greater risk of dying off.”




The results aren’t surprising. Similar findings have been reported in parts of the Amazon where trees are poorly adapted to drought and fire. Climate models also forecast an increase in drought and fire across large extents of the Amazon rainforest.




The growing risk to rainforests from the effects of climate change are a worrying sign for efforts to curtail global warming. Tropical forests are currently an important carbon sink. But as they burn or die off from drought, the carbon they store is released, contributing further to climate change.




CITATION: Tomo’omi Kumagai and Amilcare Porporato. Drought-induced mortality of a Bornean tropical rain forest amplified by climate change. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 117, G02032, 13 PP., 2012 doi:10.1029/2011JG001835






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