Artigo

Climate change patterns in Amazonia and biodiversity

Precise characterization of hydroclimate variability in Amazonia on various timescales is critical to understanding the link between climate change and biodiversity. Here we present absolute-dated speleothem oxygen isotope records that characterize hydroclimate variation in western and eastern Amazo...

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Autor principal: Cheng, Hai J.
Outros Autores: Sinha, Ashish, Cruz, Francisco W., Wang, Xianfeng, Edwards, R., D'Horta, Fernando Mendonça, Ribas, Camila Cherem, Vuille, M., Stott, Lowell D., Auler, Augusto Sarreiro
Grau: Artigo
Idioma: English
Publicado em: Nature Communications 2020
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16035
Resumo:
Precise characterization of hydroclimate variability in Amazonia on various timescales is critical to understanding the link between climate change and biodiversity. Here we present absolute-dated speleothem oxygen isotope records that characterize hydroclimate variation in western and eastern Amazonia over the past 250 and 20 ka, respectively. Although our records demonstrate the coherent millennial-scale precipitation variability across tropical-subtropical South America, the orbital-scale precipitation variability between western and eastern Amazonia exhibits a quasi-dipole pattern. During the last glacial period, our records imply a modest increase in precipitation amount in western Amazonia but a significant drying in eastern Amazonia, suggesting that higher biodiversity in western Amazonia, contrary to 'Refugia Hypothesis', is maintained under relatively stable climatic conditions. In contrast, the glacial-interglacial climatic perturbations might have been instances of loss rather than gain in biodiversity in eastern Amazonia, where forests may have been more susceptible to fragmentation in response to larger swings in hydroclimate. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.