The effects of deforestation on downwind precipitation

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Abstract

Protecting forests from agricultural expansion and wildfires while the world population is growing and the climate is warming remains one of the biggest challenges humanity currently faces. While global modelling and regional observation based studies have found significant effects from deforestation on precipitation, leading mostly to drying precipitation trends and shorting rainy seasons, this study represents the first global estimate of first order deforestation effects on precipitation. Using a recently developed precipitationshed database and actual deforestation data, a new measure is developed to quantify potential deforestation impact per grid cell which in turn is related to annual precipitation trends as well as seasonal differences in tropical regions. In seven regions analysed, a majority of subregions suggested a relationship between deforestation impact and a relative drying precipitation trend in the 2001-2018 study period compared to the long term average. While these results provide further evidence of deforestation contributing to a downwind drying precipitation trend across different continents and climate regions, five other regions studied showed no significant relation or suggest relative wetting related to deforestation impact. One of this regions is the South America Tropical (SAT) region, the region most well-known for its widespread and intense Amazonian deforestation. The two regions downwind of the SAT region however are highly impacted by SAT deforestation and experience most relative drying in the areas impacted most impacted by deforestation, suggesting strong teleconnecting effects. In the seasonal analysis, only two out of four tropical regions studied show more subregions linking deforestation impact to relative drying in the first wet month compared to the wettest month. While these results provide new insights into the global influence deforestation can have on moisture availability, more research needs to be done into the indirect and feedback effects related to deforestation. Additionally, a more robust way of including other factors influencing precipitation trends like large scale oscillations could further enhance the understanding of this important issue.

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