Western Mail

Amazon rainforest ‘could collapse in 50 years’ – report

- NILIMA MARSHALL newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

LARGE ecosystems such as the Amazon rainforest could collapse in less than 50 years once a crucial tipping point is reached, scientists have claimed.

Their prediction­s are based on computer simulation­s using realworld data gathered from more than 40 natural environmen­ts.

Writing in Nature Communicat­ions, the researcher­s said some of these ecosystems are collapsing at a “significan­tly faster rate” than thought, and when put under stress, could transform into “an alternativ­e ecosystem”.

For example, they said, the Amazon rainforest, which is around 5.5 million square kilometres (2.1 million square miles) could shift to “a savannah-type ecosystem with a mix of trees and grass” in just 49 years, while the Caribbean coral reefs, about 20,000sq km (7,722 square miles), would become bleached and sparsely populated in just 15 years.

Dr Simon Willcock, of Bangor University’s School of Natural Sciences, and joint lead author on the study, said: “Unfortunat­ely, what our paper reveals is that humanity needs to prepare for changes far sooner than expected.

“These rapid changes to the world’s largest and most iconic ecosystems would impact the benefits which they provide us with, including everything from food and materials, to the oxygen and water we need for life.”

The researcher­s, including teams from Bangor University, Southampto­n University and the School of Oriental & African Studies, University of London, studied data on the transforma­tions of four land, 25 marine and 13 freshwater ecosystems.

Using computer modelling, they found that while larger ecosystems took longer to collapse, their breakdown occurred relatively quickly compared with the smaller systems.

Prof John Dearing, from Geography and Environmen­t at Southampto­n University, who led the research, said: “We intuitivel­y knew that big systems would collapse more slowly than small ones – due to the time it takes for impacts to diffuse across large distances.

“But what was unexpected was the finding that big systems collapse much faster than you might expect – even the largest on Earth only taking possibly a few decades.”

Commenting on the research, James Crabbe, a professor of biochemist­ry, University of Bedfordshi­re, who was not involved in the study, described the study as “a thorough and well-researched paper” that brings together “observatio­ns with five computatio­nal models”.

But Dr Erika Berenguer, a senior research associate at University of Oxford and Lancaster University, who was also not involved in the study, said its conclusion­s are not supported by the data analysed.

For example, she said, the claim that the Amazon will become a “savannah-type ecosystem” was not tested in the paper.

“The authors use data from only four terrestria­l systems, none of which is a tropical rainforest, but still claim that the Amazon, the largest rainforest on the planet, will experience a dieback in just 50 years,” she said.

“While there is no doubt that the Amazon is at great risk and that a tipping point is likely, such inflated claims do not help either science or policy-making.”

 ??  ?? > The Amazon forest canopy at dawn – the huge area could shift to ‘a savannah-type ecosystem with a mix of trees and grass’ in just 49 years
> The Amazon forest canopy at dawn – the huge area could shift to ‘a savannah-type ecosystem with a mix of trees and grass’ in just 49 years

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom