Episode
The Sunday Read: ‘Has the Amazon Reached Its “Tipping Point”?’
Description
In the past half-century, 17 percent of the Amazon — an area larger than Texas — has been converted to croplands or cattle pasture. Less forest means less recycled rain, less vapor to cool the air, less of a canopy to shield against sunlight. Under drier, hotter conditions, even the lushest of Amazonian trees will shed leaves to save water, inhibiting photosynthesis — a feedback loop that is only exacerbated by global warming.According to the Brazilian Earth system scientist Carlos Nobre, if deforestation reaches 20 to 25 percent of the original area, “flying rivers” — rain clouds that recycle the forest’s own moisture five or six times — will weaken enough that a rainforest simply will not be able to survive in most of the Amazon Basin. Instead it will collapse into scrubby savanna, possibly in a matter of decades.Losing the Amazon, one of the most biodiverse ecosystems on Earth, would be catastrophic for the tens of thousands of species that make their home there. What scientists are most concerned about, though, is the potential for this regional, ecological tipping point to produce knock-on effects in the global climate.This story was recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
Chapters
Parts of the Amazon rainforest are emitting more carbon dioxide than they are absorbing, indicating that the ecosystem may be malfunctioning and reaching its tipping point.
00:00 - 04:18 (04:18)
Summary
Parts of the Amazon rainforest are emitting more carbon dioxide than they are absorbing, indicating that the ecosystem may be malfunctioning and reaching its tipping point.
EpisodeThe Sunday Read: ‘Has the Amazon Reached Its “Tipping Point”?’
PodcastThe Daily
Samples taken from high altitude in the southeastern Amazon suggest that the forest could be releasing more carbon than it absorbs due to emissions from deforestation exceeding the forest's capacity to absorb carbon.
04:18 - 12:20 (08:01)
Summary
Samples taken from high altitude in the southeastern Amazon suggest that the forest could be releasing more carbon than it absorbs due to emissions from deforestation exceeding the forest's capacity to absorb carbon. The study provides a comprehensive picture of the region's so-called carbon budget, which could be used to inform conservation efforts.
EpisodeThe Sunday Read: ‘Has the Amazon Reached Its “Tipping Point”?’
PodcastThe Daily
The Amazon Rainforest's "flying rivers" recycle the forest's own moisture, generating up to 45% of its total precipitation.
12:20 - 26:46 (14:26)
Summary
The Amazon Rainforest's "flying rivers" recycle the forest's own moisture, generating up to 45% of its total precipitation. Deforestation could weaken these flying rivers, making it impossible to achieve the goals outlined in the Paris Agreement and accelerating climate change.
EpisodeThe Sunday Read: ‘Has the Amazon Reached Its “Tipping Point”?’
PodcastThe Daily
A scientist, Erika Berigner, worked on a project to measure every tree in the Tapajós National Forest to calculate the weight of all the organic matter as a proxy for carbon, which could help the global community understand climate change better.
26:46 - 37:29 (10:43)
Summary
A scientist, Erika Berigner, worked on a project to measure every tree in the Tapajós National Forest to calculate the weight of all the organic matter as a proxy for carbon, which could help the global community understand climate change better.
EpisodeThe Sunday Read: ‘Has the Amazon Reached Its “Tipping Point”?’
PodcastThe Daily
Researchers warn that the melting of ice sheets and thawing of permafrost may be triggered even at 1.5 degrees of warming, leading to a domino-like tipping cascade that could push the global climate beyond a critical threshold into an alternate feedback loop called Hothouse Earth.
37:29 - 47:22 (09:53)
Summary
Researchers warn that the melting of ice sheets and thawing of permafrost may be triggered even at 1.5 degrees of warming, leading to a domino-like tipping cascade that could push the global climate beyond a critical threshold into an alternate feedback loop called Hothouse Earth. This could cause hostile conditions, making some regions uninhabitably cold and others warmer, as well as triggering anomalies that cannot be predicted with a focus only on the most likely outcomes.
EpisodeThe Sunday Read: ‘Has the Amazon Reached Its “Tipping Point”?’
PodcastThe Daily
The Amazon rainforest is facing changes as the faster-growing imbauba trees dominate the canopy, storing less carbon and leaving less room for slower-growing mahogany trees.
47:22 - 56:03 (08:41)
Summary
The Amazon rainforest is facing changes as the faster-growing imbauba trees dominate the canopy, storing less carbon and leaving less room for slower-growing mahogany trees. Additionally, there is an increase in savanna-like areas caused by trees that can withstand drier conditions proliferating while trees that need more water die in greater numbers.
EpisodeThe Sunday Read: ‘Has the Amazon Reached Its “Tipping Point”?’
PodcastThe Daily
The silence of the rainforest is broken by the sounds of birds as Beringer and her companions take a moment to appreciate the grandeur of the forest, feeling at one with nature.
56:03 - 57:51 (01:48)
Summary
The silence of the rainforest is broken by the sounds of birds as Beringer and her companions take a moment to appreciate the grandeur of the forest, feeling at one with nature.