Abstract

Previous studies suggested that the Amazon, the largest rainforest on Earth, changes from a CO2 sink to a CO2 source during the dry/fire season. However, the biospheric contributions to atmospheric CO2 are not well understood during the two main seasons, the dry/fire season and the wet season. In this article, we utilize Orbiting Carbon Observatory 2 (OCO‐2) Solar‐Induced Fluorescence (SIF) to explore photosynthetic activity during the different seasons. The spatiotemporal variability of OCO‐2 SIF, OCO‐2 CO2, precipitation, and burned area are investigated over the Amazon from September 2014 to December 2019. Averaging over the entire Amazon region, we found a positive temporal correlation (0.94) between OCO‐2 SIF and Global Precipitation Climatology Project precipitation and a negative temporal correlation (−0.64) between OCO‐2 SIF and OCO‐2 CO2, consistent with the fact that precipitation enhances photosynthesis, which results in higher values for SIF and rate of removal of CO2 from the atmosphere above the Amazon region. We also observed seasonality in the spatial variability of these variables within the Amazon region. During the dry/fire (August–October) season, low SIF values, low precipitation, high vapor pressure deficit (VPD), large burned areas, and high atmospheric CO2 are mainly found over the southern Amazon region. In contrast, during the wet season (January–March), high SIF values, high precipitation, low VPD, smaller burned areas, and low CO2 are found over both the central and southern Amazon regions. The seasonal difference in SIF suggests that photosynthetic activity is reduced during the dry/fire season relative to the wet season as a result of low precipitation and high VPD, especially over the southern Amazon region, which will contribute to more CO2 in the atmosphere during the dry/fire season.

Highlights

  • Under favorable conditions such as sufficient nutrients and soil water, plants utilize sunlight, carbon dioxide (CO2), and water to produce glucose by photosynthesis

  • Temporal variability of solar-induced fluorescence (SIF), Precipitation, and CO2 over the Amazon region To explore the seasonal variations of SIF, precipitation, and CO2, we calculated the monthly mean value of Orbiting Carbon Observatory 2 (OCO-2) SIF, Global Precipitation Climatology Project (GPCP) precipitation, and detrended OCO-2 CO2 over the Amazon region from September 2014 to December 2019

  • Since we are not interested in the long-term trend of CO2 in this paper, we removed the linear trend of CO2 at each grid point (Bevington and Robinson, 2003; Jiang et al, 2021) before examining the temporal correlation between OCO-2 SIF and CO2

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Summary

Introduction

Under favorable conditions such as sufficient nutrients and soil water, plants utilize sunlight, carbon dioxide (CO2), and water to produce glucose by photosynthesis. Precipitation and high vapor pressure deficit, especially over the southern Amazon region, which will contribute to more CO2 in the atmosphere during the dry/fire season. 2. Photosynthetic activity is reduced over the southern Amazon region during the dry/fire season as a result of low precipitation and high vapor pressure deficit.

Results
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