Drought bites as Amazon’s ‘flying rivers’ dry up
Drought bites as Amazons flying rivers dry up
Scientists say deforestation and climate change responsible for forests not producing vapour clouds that bring rain to Brazil, reports Climate News Network
Jan Rocha for Climate News Network, part of the Guardian Environment Network
theguardian.com, Monday 15 September 2014 07.52 EDT
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Amazon rainforest kick up humidity that brings rain to Brazil its a giant water pump,
but human activity is damaging it. Photograph: Fernanda Preto/Getty Images
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The unprecedented drought now affecting São Paulo, South Americas giant metropolis, is believed to be caused by the absence of the flying rivers ? the vapour clouds from the Amazon that normally bring rain to the centre and south of Brazil.
Some Brazilian scientists say the absence of rain that has dried up rivers and reservoirs in central and southeast Brazil is not just a quirk of nature, but a change brought about by a combination of the continuing deforestation of the Amazon and global warming.
This combination, they say, is reducing the role of the Amazon rainforest as a giant water pump, releasing billions of litres of humidity from the trees into the air in the form of vapour.
Meteorologist Jose Marengo, a member of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, first coined the phrase flying rivers to describe these massive volumes of vapour that rise from the rainforest, travel west, and then ? blocked by the Andes ? turn south.
More:
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/sep/15/drought-bites-as-amazons-flying-rivers-dry-up