Abstract

Abstract. Tropical deforestation contributes to the build-up of atmospheric carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Within the deforestation process, fire is frequently used to eliminate biomass in preparation for agricultural use. Quantifying these deforestation-induced fire emissions represents a challenge, and current estimates are only available at coarse spatial resolution with large uncertainty. Here we developed a biogeochemical model using remote sensing observations of plant productivity, fire activity, and deforestation rates to estimate emissions for the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso during 2001–2005. Our model of DEforestation CArbon Fluxes (DECAF) runs at 250-m spatial resolution with a monthly time step to capture spatial and temporal heterogeneity in fire dynamics in our study area within the ''arc of deforestation'', the southern and eastern fringe of the Amazon tropical forest where agricultural expansion is most concentrated. Fire emissions estimates from our modelling framework were on average 90 Tg C year−1, mostly stemming from fires associated with deforestation (74%) with smaller contributions from fires from conversions of Cerrado or pastures to cropland (19%) and pasture fires (7%). In terms of carbon dynamics, about 80% of the aboveground living biomass and litter was combusted when forests were converted to pasture, and 89% when converted to cropland because of the highly mechanized nature of the deforestation process in Mato Grosso. The trajectory of land use change from forest to other land uses often takes more than one year, and part of the biomass that was not burned in the dry season following deforestation burned in consecutive years. This led to a partial decoupling of annual deforestation rates and fire emissions, and lowered interannual variability in fire emissions. Interannual variability in the region was somewhat dampened as well because annual emissions from fires following deforestation and from maintenance fires did not covary, although the effect was small due to the minor contribution of maintenance fires. Our results demonstrate how the DECAF model can be used to model deforestation fire emissions at relatively high spatial and temporal resolutions. Detailed model output is suitable for policy applications concerned with annual emissions estimates distributed among post-clearing land uses and science applications in combination with atmospheric emissions modelling to provide constrained global deforestation fire emissions estimates. DECAF currently estimates emissions from fire; future efforts can incorporate other aspects of net carbon emissions from deforestation including soil respiration and regrowth.

Highlights

  • Tropical deforestation and fire are fundamentally linked because fire is the dominant means to eliminate forest biomass so land can be made suitable for agriculture or grazing

  • Average forest Net Primary Production (NPP) was 1131±118 (1σ range) g C m−2 year−1 with lower annual NPP for Cerrado, croplands, and pasture mostly due to more seasonality in the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) signal compared to forests (Table 4)

  • Our aboveground living biomass (AGLB) estimates for the region falls within the range of other estimates, but our model could not reproduce the spatial distribution of AGLB described by previous studies for our study region

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Summary

Introduction

Tropical deforestation and fire are fundamentally linked because fire is the dominant means to eliminate forest biomass so land can be made suitable for agriculture or grazing. Fires are often used to prevent trees from invading pastures, for nutrient recycling, and to remove crop residues. G. R. van der Werf et al.: Fire emissions from an active deforestation region as maintenance fires since post-fire land use does not change. With many human-induced fires at the tropical forest frontier detected by satellites each year, human activity dwarfs the importance of naturally occurring tropical forest fires started by lightning during extreme drought periods

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