March 12, 2007
NASA STUDIES TRUE COLORS OF EVERGREEN RAINFORESTS
NASA satellites reveal that Amazon
forests are neither evergreen nor dependent on constant rain, and are
capable
of manufacturing their seasons.
Researchers report a 25 percent increase in the amount of green leaf
area
during the dry season when the skies are relatively clear. They found
that the
rain forests are more dependent on light than rain, enduring several
months of
dry season by tapping water deep in the soil with their long roots. The
results
of this NASA-funded research will appear in the March 20 issue of the
Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences.
“Our finding is similar to the discovery of a large green
continent, nearly a
third the size of South America, appearing and disappearing each
year,”
explained Ranga Myneni, professor of geography and environment at
The Amazon rain forest covers an area equivalent to more than half of
the
continental
Scientists used satellite images to study the amount and dynamics of
green leaf
area of Amazon rain forests. This study was made possible by more than
five
years of daily estimates of leaf area over the entire Amazon basin at
one-
kilometer resolution with the Moderate Resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer
aboard the NASA Terra satellite, by a team of 27 individuals from 15
different
institutions.
The researchers report that the rain forests sprout new leaves in
anticipation
of the coming dry season. The greener forests capture more sunlight,
absorb
more carbon dioxide and evaporate more water during the dry season
compared to
the wet season, according to scientists. By gradually humidifying the
atmosphere, the forests play an integral role in the onset of the wet
season,
scientists observed.
"This work is an important outcome of over 10 years of NASA’s
investments
and teamwork to develop, build and launch state-of-the art sensors and
processing algorithms enabling the discovery of hitherto unknown
vegetation
dynamics on Earth, added Rama Nemani, a co-author of the paper at NASA
Ames
Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
This work was made possible through funding by NASA as part of a
long-term
research program dedicated to understanding how human-induced and
natural
changes affect our global environment.
##
Contact:
Ruth Dasso Marlaire
650-604-4709
rmarlaire@mail.arc.nasa.gov
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/news/releases/2007/07_11AR.html