Journal article

Impact of Abrupt Land Cover Changes by Tropical Deforestation on Southeast Asian Climate and Agriculture


Authors listToelle, Merja H.; Engler, Steven; Panitz, Hans-Juergen

Publication year2017

Pages2587-2600

JournalJournal of Climate

Volume number30

Issue number7

ISSN0894-8755

eISSN1520-0442

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0131.1

PublisherAmerican Meteorological Society


Abstract
Southeast Asia (SE Asia) undergoes major and rapid land cover changes as a result of agricultural expansion. Landscape conversion results in alterations to surface fluxes of moisture, heat, and momentum and sequentially impact the boundary layer structure, cloud-cover regime, and all other aspects of local and regional weather and climate occurring also in regimes remote from the original landscape disturbance. The extent and magnitude of the anthropogenic modification effect is still uncertain. This study investigates the biogeophysical effects of large-scale deforestation on monsoon regions using an idealized deforestation simulation. The simulations are performed using the regional climate model COSMO-CLM forced with ERA-Interim data during the period 1984-2004. In the deforestation experiment, grasses in SE Asia, between 208S and 208N, replace areas covered by trees. Using principal component analysis, it is found that abrupt conversion from forest to grassland cover leads to major climate variability in the year of disturbance, which is 1990, over SE Asia. The persistent land modification leads to a decline in evapotranspiration and precipitation and a significant warming due to reduced latent heat flux during 1990-2004. The strongest effects are seen in the lowlands of SE Asia. Daily precipitation extremes increase during the monsoon period and ENSO, differing from the result of mean precipitation changes. Maximum temperature also increases by 2 degrees C. The impacts of land cover change are more intense than the effects of El Nino and La Nina. In addition, results show that these land clearings can amplify the impact of the natural mode ENSO, which has a strong impact on climate conditions in SE Asia. This will likely have consequences for the agricultural output.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleToelle, M., Engler, S. and Panitz, H. (2017) Impact of Abrupt Land Cover Changes by Tropical Deforestation on Southeast Asian Climate and Agriculture, Journal of Climate, 30(7), pp. 2587-2600. https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0131.1

APA Citation styleToelle, M., Engler, S., & Panitz, H. (2017). Impact of Abrupt Land Cover Changes by Tropical Deforestation on Southeast Asian Climate and Agriculture. Journal of Climate. 30(7), 2587-2600. https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0131.1



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Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 01:36