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Increased dry-season length over southern Amazonia in recent decades and its implication for future climate projection

TLDR
It is observed that the dry-season length over southern Amazonia has increased significantly since 1979, primarily owing to a delay of its ending dates (dry-season end, DSE), and is accompanied by a prolonged fire season.
Abstract
We have observed that the dry-season length (DSL) has increased over southern Amazonia since 1979, primarily owing to a delay of its ending dates (dry-season end, DSE), and is accompanied by a prolonged fire season. A poleward shift of the subtropical jet over South America and an increase of local convective inhibition energy in austral winter (June–August) seem to cause the delay of the DSE in austral spring (September–November). These changes cannot be simply linked to the variability of the tropical Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Although they show some resemblance to the effects of anthropogenic forcings reported in the literature, we cannot attribute them to this cause because of inadequate representation of these processes in the global climate models that were presented in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fifth Assessment Report. These models significantly underestimate the variability of the DSE and DSL and their controlling processes. Such biases imply that the future change of the DSE and DSL may be underestimated by the climate projections provided by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fifth Assessment Report models. Although it is not clear whether the observed increase of the DSL will continue in the future, were it to continue at half the rate of that observed, the long DSL and fire season that contributed to the 2005 drought would become the new norm by the late 21st century. The large uncertainty shown in this study highlights the need for a focused effort to better understand and simulate these changes over southern Amazonia.

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Land-use and climate change risks in the Amazon and the need of a novel sustainable development paradigm.

TL;DR: This work argues for a new development paradigm away from only attempting to reconcile maximizing conservation versus intensification of traditional agriculture and expansion of hydropower capacity that sees the Amazon as a global public good of biological assets that can enable the creation of innovative high-value products, services, and platforms through combining advanced digital, biological, and material technologies of the Fourth Industrial Revolution in progress.
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Extreme seasonal droughts and floods in Amazonia: causes, trends and impacts

TL;DR: A review of recent progress in the study and understanding of extreme seasonal events in the Amazon region, focusing on drought and floods, is presented in this paper, where the authors assess the impacts of such extremes on natural and human systems in the region, considering ecological, economic and societal impacts in urban and rural areas, particularly during the recent decades.

Extreme seasonal droughts and floods in Amazonia: causes, trends and impacts

TL;DR: A review of recent progress in the study and understanding of extreme seasonal events in the Amazon region, focusing on drought and floods, is presented in this article, where the authors assess the impacts of such extremes on natural and human systems in the region, considering ecological, economic and societal impacts in urban and rural areas, particularly during the recent decades.

Expansion of the Hadley cell under global warming: winter versus summer

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TL;DR: In this article, a scaling relationship is introduced to explain the seasonality in the outer boundary of the Hadley cell in both climatology and trend in the simulations of phase 3 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP3).
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Tropical Forests in the Anthropocene

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Records from multiple long-term monitoring plots across Amazonia are used to assess forest responses to the intense 2005 drought, a possible analog of future events that may accelerate climate change through carbon losses and changed surface energy balances.
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