Marlies Gumpenberger et al 2010 Environ. Res. Lett. 5 014013 doi:10.1088/1748-9326/5/1/014013
Marlies Gumpenberger1, Katrin Vohland1,3, Ursula Heyder1, Benjamin Poulter1,4, Kirsten Macey2, Anja Rammig1, Alexander Popp1 and Wolfgang Cramer1
Show affiliationsDeforestation is a major threat to tropical forests worldwide, contributing up to one-fifth of global carbon emissions into the atmosphere. Despite protection efforts, deforestation of tropical forests has continued in recent years. Providing incentives to reducing deforestation has been proposed in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Bali negotiations in 2007 to decelerate emissions from deforestation (REDD—reduced emissions from deforestation and forest degradation). A number of methodological issues such as ensuring permanence, establishing reference emissions levels that do not reward business-as-usual and having a measuring, reporting and verification system in place are essential elements in implementing successful REDD schemes. To assess the combined impacts of climate and land-use change on tropical forest carbon stocks in the 21st century, we use a dynamic global vegetation model (LPJ DGVM) driven by five different climate change projections under a given greenhouse gas emission scenario (SRES A2) and two contrasting land-use change scenarios. We find that even under a complete stop of deforestation after the period of the Kyoto Protocol (post-2012) some countries may continue to lose carbon stocks due to climate change. Especially at risk is tropical Latin America, although the presence and magnitude of the risk depends on the climate change scenario. By contrast, strong protection of forests could increase carbon uptake in many tropical countries, due to CO2 fertilization effects, even under altered climate regimes.
Issue 1 (January-March 2010)
Received 14 November 2009, accepted for publication 3 February 2010
Published 16 February 2010
Marlies Gumpenberger et al 2010 Environ. Res. Lett. 5 014013
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