INVESTIGADORES
SOLMAN Silvina Alicia
artículos
Título:
Effects of land use change in southern South American climate.
Autor/es:
PESSACG N. L; SOLMAN S.
Revista:
CLIMATE RESEARCH
Editorial:
INTER-RESEARCH
Referencias:
Lugar: Oldendorf/Luhe; Año: 2012 vol. 55 p. 33 - 51
ISSN:
0936-577X
Resumen:
In the last decades, the agricultural areas over La Plata Basin and the Argentinean Pampas have been extended deforestation. With the aim of understanding the potential impacts  of land-use changes over the South American climate, several simulations with the regional climate  model MM5 were carried out for different idealized land-use scenarios representing agricultural expansion, reforestation and desertification, respectively. Results show a significant warming  and drying when forests were replaced by bare soils due to an increase in the net radiation  budget and a reduction in the latent heat flux. However, the replacement of forests by crops  resulted in a decrease in the net radiation budget at the surface, together with a decrease in the  latent and sensible heat fluxes, leading to a significant cooling over central and eastern Argentina  and drying over Bolivia and western Paraguay. Finally, the shift from the actual land cover to crops  produced a cooling and wetting mainly over northern Argentina, Paraguay and part of Bolivia due to a decrease in the net radiation budget and sensible heat flux and an increase in the latent heat flux. The regional response for these idealized scenarios exceeds the area where the land-use was changed, indicating that non-local mechanisms are important. A reduction in the roughness length when forest is replaced by either crops or bare soil leads to an increase in the northerly winds, which modifies the moisture flux convergence patterns and hence affects precipitation.