Fire (Aug 2024)

Impacts of Fire Frequency on Net CO<sub>2</sub> Emissions in the Cerrado Savanna Vegetation

  • Letícia Gomes,
  • Jéssica Schüler,
  • Camila Silva,
  • Ane Alencar,
  • Bárbara Zimbres,
  • Vera Arruda,
  • Wallace Vieira da Silva,
  • Edriano Souza,
  • Julia Shimbo,
  • Beatriz Schwantes Marimon,
  • Eddie Lenza,
  • Christopher William Fagg,
  • Sabrina Miranda,
  • Paulo Sérgio Morandi,
  • Ben Hur Marimon-Junior,
  • Mercedes Bustamante

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fire7080280
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 8
p. 280

Abstract

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Savannas play a key role in estimating emissions. Climate change has impacted the Cerrado savanna carbon balance. We used the burned area product and long-term field inventories on post-fire vegetation regrowth to estimate the impact of the fire on greenhouse gas emissions and net carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in the Cerrado savanna between 1985 and 2020. We estimated the immediate emissions from fires, CO2 emissions by plant mortality, and CO2 removal from vegetation regrowth. The burned area was 29,433 km2; savanna fires emitted approximately 2,227,964 Gg of CO2, 85,057 Gg of CO, 3010 Gg of CH4, 5,103 Gg of NOx, and 275 Gg of N2O. We simulated vegetation regrowth according to three fire regime scenarios: extreme (high fire frequency and short fire interval), intermediate (medium fire frequency and medium fire interval), and moderate (low fire frequency and long fire interval). Under the extreme and intermediate scenarios, the vegetation biomass decreased by 2.0 and 0.4% (ton/ha-year), while the biomass increased by 2.1% under a moderate scenario. We converted this biomass into CO2 and showed that the vegetation regrowth removed 63.5% of the total CO2 emitted (2,355,426 Gg), indicating that the Cerrado savanna has been a source of CO2 to the atmosphere.

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