Amazon could collapse in 50 yrs
The Amazon rainforest is nearing a threshold which, once crossed, would see one of the world's largest and richest ecosystems morph into arid savannah within half-a-century, scientists said Tuesday.
Another major ecosystem, Caribbean coral reefs, could die off in only 15 years were it to pass its own point-of-no-return, the scientists reported in the journal Nature Communications.
Each of these so-called "regime changes" would have dire consequences for humanity and other species with which we share habitat, they warned.
In both cases the projected tipping point for irreversible change results from global warming and environmental damage -- deforestation in the case of the Amazon, and pollution and acidification for corals.
The UN's climate science advisory panel, the IPCC, has said that 1.5 degrees Celsius of atmospheric warming above preindustrial levels would doom 90 percent of the world's shallow-water corals. A 2C rise would spell their near-complete demise.
Earth's surface has already heated up more than 1C. The temperature tipping point for the Amazon is less clear, but scientists estimate that clearing 35 percent of its surface would trigger its eventual demise.
About 20 percent of the Amazon basin rainforest -- straddling seven nations and covering more than five million square kilometres (two million square miles) -- has been wiped out since 1970, mostly for the production of lumber, soy, palm oil, biofuels and beef.
"Humanity needs to prepare for changes far sooner than expected," said lead author Simon Willcock, a professor at Bangor University's School of Natural Science.
Recent out-of-control fires in the Amazon and Australia -- both made more likely and more intense by climate change -- suggest that many ecosystems are "teetering on the edge of this precipice," he added.
Scientists not involved in the research endorsed its methodology and sounded an alarm at its conclusions.
"The implications of the study for the Amazon are terrifying," said Alexandre Antonelli, director of science at the Royal Botanical Gardens in Kew, London.
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