Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2024)

Resilience of Amazon rainfall to CO2 removal forcing

  • Suqin Zhang,
  • Xia Qu,
  • Gang Huang,
  • Peng Hu,
  • Xianke Yang,
  • Ya Wang,
  • Liang Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad193d
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
p. 014073

Abstract

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Over the Amazon region, rainfall-induced changes to CO _2 pathways significantly impact humans and multiple ecosystems. Its resilience is of vital importance, and idealized CO _2 removal experiments indicate that declining trends in rainfall amounts are irreversible and exhibit a deficiency when the CO _2 concentration returns to the pre-industrial level. The irreversible decline in Amazon rainfall is mainly due to the weakened ascent, further led by two main causes. (1) Enhanced tropospheric warming and a wetter atmospheric boundary layer over the tropics during CO _2 removal generate a strong meridional gradient of temperature and specific humidity; driven by prevailing northeasterly winds, negative moist enthalpy advection occurs, which in turn weakens the ascent over the Amazon and results in anomalous drought. (2) The enhanced radiative cooling of atmospheric column. Driven by the negative lapse-rate feedback, the outgoing longwave radiative flux increases in the clear-sky atmosphere. As a result, the anomalous diabatic descent generates to maintain the energy balance of the atmospheric column. This result implies that the symmetric removal of CO _2 does not guarantee full recovery of regional precipitation.

Keywords