Journal article
Degradation and forgone removals increase the carbon impact of intact forest loss by 626%
SL Maxwell, T Evans, JEM Watson, A Morel, H Grantham, A Duncan, N Harris, P Potapov, RK Runting, O Venter, S Wang, Y Malhi
Science Advances | AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE | Published : 2019
Abstract
Intact tropical forests, free from substantial anthropogenic influence, store and sequester large amounts of atmospheric carbon but are currently neglected in international climate policy. We show that between 2000 and 2013, direct clearance of intact tropical forest areas accounted for 3.2% of gross carbon emissions from all deforestation across the pantropics. However, full carbon accounting requires the consideration of forgone carbon sequestration, selective logging, edge effects, and defaunation. When these factors were considered, the net carbon impact resulting from intact tropical forest loss between 2000 and 2013 increased by a factor of 6 (626%), from 0.34 (0.37 to 0.21) to 2.12 (2..
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Funding Acknowledgements
This project was supported by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.